But Chinese companies are reluctant to go
through it
The
wave of outward investment from China, amounting to US$68 billion in 2010
according to the 2011 UNCTAD World Investment Report, appears to be skipping
over Taiwan despite government efforts to pull in FDI from the mainland.
Chinese
businessmen have only invested US$272 million in the island since 2009 when
rules were relaxed, a tiny fraction of the US$80 billion that 80,000 Taiwanese
companies have invested in China.
That is
probably because the rules prohibit them from having board control. Another
prohibited them from acquiring more than 10 percent of existing Taiwanese
technology companies. Taiwan has not attracted any Chinese investment in anchor
sectors, such as panels and chips, since liberalization began. Also, the sectors
that the Chinese would really like to get their hands on – finance and banking
– remain off limits.
Although
Taiwan’s cabinet last week liberalized rules for a third time to allow for
increased Chinese investment, the measure is expected to have little impact,
frustrating government officials.
The
latest measure allows mainland investors to hold shares in 115 types of
manufacturing businesses, 23 service ones and 23 in public construction.
The two
previous waves of investment rule relaxations also failed to create significant
inflows. In the first round of relaxations implemented in 2009, Taipei allowed
FDI from the mainland in 192 items that were not considered sensitive,
competitive, low profit or mature – the list contained textiles, garments and
clothing accessories, electronic components, computers, mobile phones,
automobiles and plastics. But that only brought in some US$140 million.
Then,
in March 2011, panels and semiconductors together with 40 other sectors were
added to the list amid predictions that Chinese FDI would grow dramatically.
Economists
and officials believed that mainland TV brands would form strategic alliances
with LCD panel firms in Taiwan in order to stabilize their component supply,
while the Taiwanese firms in turn would be able to afford technology upgrades
to compete against rival South Korea.
Under
the terms of the new liberalization, subway, road and station construction will
no longer be off-limits to the Chinese, paving the way for mergers and
acquisition, Chinese investors will be able to hold 49 percent in local firms
that are not in key manufacturing sectors, such as flat panels, semiconductors,
LEDs and solar batteries.
Yet
despite this third wave, the Taiwanese government's own target for investment
from China this year is set at a humble US$400 million. By comparison,
Americans had investments worth US$2.15 billion on the island last year,
Singaporeans US$1.02 billion and the Japanese US$970 million.
Economists
in Taipei agree that a massive inflow of funds from across the Taiwan Strait in
response to the third wave of relaxations is hardly expected.
“There
continue to be restrictions on mainland investment in Taiwan within many
sectors – most notably land [to prevent speculation in the property market]”, said
Ronald A. Edwards, an expert on China's political economy and professor at
Tamkang University.
But
also political risks loom large in the eyes of many potential mainland
investors, Edwards said. “Any sudden massive influx of investment from the mainland
is bound to cause a political reaction in Taiwan that works against further
investment or even obtaining the returns on the investment.
Edwards
also pointed out that a crucial agreement is lacking between Beijing and Taipei
that protects mainland investment and its returns.
“Although
this appears to be on the agenda in the near future, Taiwan's presidential
elections cycles are only four-year periods. That raises the specter of
possible roll backs of such agreements, should the [anti-unification Democratic
Progressive Party] DPP take over the administration,” Edwards said.
Talks
have stalled on a cross-strait investment protection agreement with guidelines
settling legal disputes between businessmen mainly because Taipei demanded
international arbitration, which Beijing opposes as it would imply Taiwanese
statehood. Another supposed reason is Beijing's disappointment over Taipei's
conservative attitude in regards to lifting restrictions on Chinese FDI.
Both
sides have recently repeatedly signaled that the pact could be signed by July,
however.
There
is good money to be made for foreign investors in Taiwan as long as they don't
happen to come from mainland China, Edwards said:
“Many
of Taiwan's companies are competitive in the world market. But mainlanders face
unique risks. [In future,] they may even be subject to restrictions in actually
transferring their returns to the mainland or pulling out their investment.”
Hu
Sheng-Cheng, an economist at Academia Sinicia and former minister of the
Cabinet-level Council for Economic Planning and Development (CEPD), told Asia
Sentinel that the hoped-for shot in the arm of Taiwan's economy will most
likely fail to materialize, not only because foreign investments to the island
on the whole have been decreasing lately.
“Mainland
investment in Taiwan has three ends: profit-making, the obtaining of
technologies and the obtaining of operation rights. But many limitations remain
in regards to the latter two,” Hu said.
Hu
argued that price-to-earnings ratios (P/E ratios) suggest that mainland
investors cannot expect too much of a profit making, either.
“Taiwanese
enterprises' P/E ratio was 16.74 in January, the mainland's 14.00 and Hong
Kong's 10.64. This shows that investing in Taiwan is not as profitable as on
the mainland and in HK. That's why the Taiwanese government has put its target
for Chinese FDI so low,” Hu said.
He
concluded on a somewhat disturbing note. While China spurns investing in
Taiwan's technology firms and their like, it will be much more interested in
the financial sector. Domestic financial institutions, suffering from intense
competition, have been pressuring regulators to axe the 5 percent cap on
Chinese banks' stakes in their Taiwanese peers, and local media speculated that
Taipei harbors concrete plans to raise the limit to 20 percent.
“Through
the banking pipeline, the mainland can obtain detailed information about
Taiwan's economic operations; this, and not FDI, will enable them to directly
control Taiwan's economy”, Hu said.
Jens
Kastner
Asia
Sentinel
Business & Investment Opportunities
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