China is relaxing limits on
outbound investments by wealthy individuals and institutions for the first time in two years.
Not exact matches
This is testament to how the Chinese
outbound investment is an ever - fluid market that changes at a rapid pace, as mainland Chinese have increasingly become sophisticated international property buyers who tend to research thoroughly — either
by asking for information online and via social media or
by asking friends and families for recommendations — before narrowing down their options to decide on their final international property
investment destination.
According to CBRE, Asian
investment in European hotels will reach US$ 22.7 billion in 2015, fueled
by the liberalization of domestic controls governing
outbound investment.
Chinese
investments in the US, however, are already down 67 % in the first three quarters of 2017 compared to 2016, according to Daniel Rosen of the Rhodium Group — a decline driven
by Chinese restrictions on
outbound M&A and
by the new US political landscape.
A report
by Chinese property search portal Juwai.com says Chinese
outbound real estate
investment could drop
by 20 % this year, report Forbes (31 July 2017).
A report last year
by KPMG and the University of Sydney showed that Australian agribusiness drew just 1 per cent of China's
outbound direct
investment in 2014.
The signing, which was part of the Ningbo Major
Investment Projects Signing Ceremony organized
by the Ningbo Municipal People's Govt, involved a total of $ 3.7 b worth of
investments in 31 projects out of which $ 1.4 b was for
outbound investments with The Kwara Chitex Industrial Park being the only Nigerian bound.
Particularly since China's accession to the World Trade Organization in 2001, Chinese in - house lawyers with experience working at multinational companies have become increasingly valued
by both foreign companies entering the Chinese market and Chinese enterprises seeking to increase
outbound investment.
Indeed, HKIAC sees 2017 as a critical year to tap the opportunities generated
by the Belt & Road Initiative (OBOR), which is an extensive
outbound investment and development strategy launched
by the Chinese government in 2013 to promote economic cooperation among countries along the OBOR routes.
Served as team's broker
by tactically positioning
investment products to clients during daily
outbound calls
According to CBRE, Asian
investment in European hotels will reach US$ 22.7 billion in 2015, fueled
by the liberalization of domestic controls governing
outbound investment.