Is it possible for Sino-Arabian business ties to substitute Sino-American ones?

Is it possible for Sino-Arabian business ties to substitute Sino-American ones?



Can Sino-Arabian ​business ties replace Sino-American ones?

WHEN CHINESE and Middle‍ Eastern moneymen meet,⁢ it is usually behind closed doors. Last month they mingled​ openly in‍ the lobby of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, at the “FII Priority” summit, an event organised by the Public Investment Fund (PIF),‍ a $780bn vehicle for Saudi sovereign wealth.⁣ It was the first meeting of its kind ‌in‍ east Asia. It will not be the ⁣last. The PIF announced it was planning to set⁢ up an office in China.⁤ Mubadala and the Investment Corporation of Dubai,⁢ two ‌Emirati sovereign wealth funds, the Qatar Investment Authority and⁣ Kuwait Investment Authority⁢ are all said to be preparing to deploy more capital in the ⁢world’s second-biggest economy.⁤ They think they can to do this without⁢ angering the⁣ increasingly China-wary West. “We are friendly people, we are friends⁣ with everyone,” Jerry Todd, an​ executive at the PIF,⁣ told⁣ the‍ conference ‍in Hong‍ Kong.

China’s investment firms and the companies they back‍ need friends right now. As Sino-American geopolitics ⁣sour, American investments in China have ​collapsed. Chinese tech firms got $1.2bn from American venture capitalists in 2022, down from $14bn in 2018. Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) by American firms in China fell below $9bn in 2023, down from ⁢$20bn five years earlier. Meanwhile M&A​ deals by Gulf entities have ballooned—from next to‍ nothing ‍in 2019 to nearly $9bn in 2023, according to data from LSEG, a financial-information firm (see⁢ chart).

Last month NIO, ​a Chinese Tesla wannabe, said it had received $2.2bn from CYVN ‍Holdings, a ‍firm controlled ⁤by Abu ⁤Dhabi’s government that had previously put⁢ more than $1bn into the⁣ electric-car maker. The NEOM Investment Fund, part of a pharaonic Saudi project to build a futuristic city in ⁢the desert, has backed Pony.AI, a part-Chinese developer of self-driving tech. Earlier in the year Saudi Aramco, ⁣the⁤ kingdom’s oil‍ colossus, ⁢invested $3.6bn in a Chinese petrochemical refinery called…

2024-01-04 08:20:25
Link from www.economist.com
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