Bank of China loans over US$50bn for overseas M&A

Quick read
Asia

(Reuters)- State-owned Bank of China said it has extended US$56.3bn of loans to fund 188 overseas acquisition deals by Chinese companies in the past six years, highlighting how local firms are seeking inroads into overseas markets as growth slows at home.

The deals funded by Bank of China, one of the country’s Big Four state banks, included those in industries ranging from electronics, infrastructure, commerce and leasing, it said in a statement posted on its website on Monday.

The bank also signed loan contracts worth US$9.7bn during the 2009–15 period to aid Chinese exporters, and US$82.6bn to finance Chinese companies’ overseas operations.

Chinese companies, backed by state lenders, have been aggressively snapping up assets overseas. The purchases are partly being driven by slowing growth at home.

In the latest example, China’s acquisitive insurer Anbang is engaged in a bidding war with Marriott International for control of Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide.

Bank of China also said that during the 2015–17 period, the lender aims to provide US$100bn of loans to fund China’s so-called “One Belt, One Road” strategy, an initiative that envisions building a network of land, sea and air routes that will open new trade links and markets for Chinese firms.

China’s firms have been snapping up assets as part of the One Belt One Road project launched in 2013, undertaking a record 19 global infrastructure deals worth US$6.8bn in 2015, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Bank of China