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China

Here’s How Much China’s Outbound Investment Is Projected to Jump In H2

By
Reuters
Reuters
and
Michelle Toh
Michelle Toh
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By
Reuters
Reuters
and
Michelle Toh
Michelle Toh
Down Arrow Button Icon
September 4, 2016, 11:16 PM ET
CHINA-ECONOMY-PROPERTY-INVESTMENT
A Chinese investor walks past an investment map showing suitable property markets for wealthy Chinese to invest in at the International Property Expo in Beijing on April 11, 2014. Wealthy Chinese will pour AUD$44 billion (US$39.4 billion) into Australian real estate over the next seven years, potentially pushing prices in one of the world's most expensive housing markets even higher. Chinese property investors have been on a international spending spree since the global financial crisis hit most of the world's economies. AFP PHOTO/Mark RALSTON (Photo credit should read MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images)MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images

China’s rapidly increasing non-financial outbound direct investment (ODI) will jump at least 20% in the second half of 2016 from a year earlier, a top government think tank said in a research report published by a newspaper on Monday.

Buoyed by an abundance of foreign exchange reserves and decreasing opportunities at home due to a sharp slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy, China’s ODI surged 58.7% year-on-year to $88.86 billion in the first half.

China’s foreign exchange reserves, the world’s biggest, stand at around $3.2 trillion.

See also: Xi Jinping Says He Hopes Australia Can Be ‘Fair’ to Foreign Investors

“Some Chinese enterprises have accumulated a large quantity of capital and have now possessed the capability to re-allocate global resources,” the State Information Centre, a unit of China’s powerful economic planner, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), said in the research report.

“The lingering depression of the global economy has also facilitated outbound investment by our country’s enterprises,” it said in the report published in the official China Securities Journal.

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The think tank warned that rising global geopolitical risk and national protectionism were the main barriers for the expansion of the Chinese investment overseas.

It forecast that the growth of China’s foreign direct investment (FDI) will slow to around 4% year-on-year in the second half of this year from 5.1% in the first half, due in part to the depreciation of the Chinese currency yuan.

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