Caixin
Caixin Global – Latest China News & Headlines

Home >

TRENDING
Analysis: Alibaba’s New Processor Shows Applications Are Key to AI Chip Success
In Depth: Megvii Co-Founder Is Back Riding the Latest AI Wave
Beijing Humanoid Robotics Hub Raises $100 Million in First Funding Round
LATEST
Beijing Humanoid Robotics Hub Raises $100 Million in First Funding Round
Analysis: Alibaba’s New Processor Shows Applications Are Key to AI Chip Success
Aerofugia Raises Nearly $150 Million to Get Flying Taxis Certified
Alibaba Pledges $432 Million in Lunar New Year AI Subsidy War
In Depth: Megvii Co-Founder Is Back Riding the Latest AI Wave
China Fines Kuaishou Unit $3.8 Million for E-Commerce Violations
Chips Drive China’s Electronics Exports
Robots Take the Stage at China’s Spring Festival Gala
Alibaba Unveils New AI Chip to Rival Nvidia’s China Offerings
ASML Expects China Revenue Drop Following Backlog-Fueled Surge
China’s Telecom Industry Stalls as Traditional Revenue Dries Up
TikTok Outage Puts New U.S. Operations to the Test
Moonshot AI Gets More Into Agents With New Model
Texas Doubles Down on China Tech Ban, Adding AI and E-Commerce Giants
Chinese GPU-Maker Challenges Nvidia in Three-Year Development Plan
In Depth: Tencent Bets Its AI Future on 28-Year-Old From OpenAI
Alibaba Sets Sights on ChatGPT and Gemini With New AI Model
China’s AI App Developers Lure New Users With Digital Red Envelopes
StepFun Raises $717 Million, Outpacing Newly Listed AI Rivals
LandSpace Pushes Ahead With $1.1 Billion IPO as Exchange Reviews Application

By Han Wei / Jan 11, 2019 03:33 AM / Finance

Photo:VCG

Photo:VCG

Chinese enterprises are retreating from an overseas spending spree in 2018, reflecting the cooling domestic economy, deleveraging policies and rising regulatory hurdles abroad. The weakening trend is expected to continue this year, according to the London-based law firm Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP.

China’s foreign mergers and acquisitions totaled $64.5 billion in 2018, a 40.7% drop from the previous year. In contrast, global mergers and acquisitions in 2018 rose 13.7% year-on-year to $3.5 trillion, according to Freshfields.

The total value of Chinese companies’ merger deals dropped 2.8% in the United States and 51% in Europe. Deals in countries covered by China’s Belt and Road initiative declined 65.9% year-on-year, according to Freshfields.

Amid government efforts to cut corporate debt and the slowdown in China’s economic growth, several leading Chinese dealmakers, including Anbang Insurance Group and HNA Group, pared back their foreign assets last year.

Wang Qing, a partner of Freshfields, said he expects even weaker efforts by Chinese companies to buy foreign assets this year in the face of rising regulatory hurdles in other countries and uncertainties related to trade tensions with the U.S.

Related: China M&A Loans Sink to 3-Year Low as Trade War Curbs Demand

Share this article
Open WeChat and scan the QR code