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Rio deal can help Australia: Chinalco boss

China to send investment team to Britain: state media
China will send a small delegation to Britain to examine investment opportunities there, state media reported Monday. The delegation, composed mainly of investment analysts, will discuss issues concerning key equipment and patent technology, the Xinhua news agency said, citing Commerce Minister Chen Deming. "It is what China needs for development," Chen was quoted as saying. Chen said on Friday during a visit to Britain that the team would be sent this week, according to Chinese media reports. A British trade and investment delegation, to be headed by Foreign Secretary David Miliband and Business Secretary Peter Mandelson, is due visit China in late April, he added, according to the reports. A Chinese investing mission just finished a European tour to Britain, Germany, Switzerland and Spain. The team signed around 13 billion dollars in deals with companies in the four countries, according to state media reports.

China Baosteel says it bought control of smaller rival
China's leading steelmaker Baosteel Group Corp. said Monday it planned to pay more than two billion yuan (294 million dollars) for a controlling stake in a smaller rival. Baosteel will take control of Ningbo Iron and Steel Co Ltd and start a restructuring programme, the Shanghai-based company said in a statement. Under the agreement, Baosteel will become the largest shareholder of Ningbo Iron and Steel with a 56.15 percent stake. Hangzhou Iron and Steel Group Co will hold the remaining interest of 43.85 percent, the statement said. Baosteel agreed to pay more than two billion yuan for the stake in Ningbo Steel, which is located in Zhejiang province, next to Shanghai in eastern China, a spokesman for the steelmaker confirmed. Ningbo Steel will raise additional capital by issuing new shares to allow the Ningbo municipal government to acquire a stake, but Baosteel will remain the largest stockholder, he said. Ningbo Steel produced about four million tonnes of steel last year, compared with 30 million tonnes for Baosteel, one of the country's top steel makers. China has been encouraging industry consolidation in the sector to increase efficiency and buying power to better compete on a global scale. Late last year, Tangshan Iron and Steel Co in Hebei province of northern China agreed to merge with two smaller rivals to create the country's biggest listed steelmaker.
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) March 2, 2009
Chinalco's proposed 19.5 billion US dollar investment in Rio Tinto could help Australia fend off the global financial crisis, the Chinese firm's president said Monday.

Visiting Australia to sell the deal, Chinalco president Xiong Weiping also sought to ease concerns about a state-owned Chinese entity taking such a huge stake in the country's resources assets.

If approved, the deal will be China's largest ever foreign investment, widely seen as a move by Beijing to secure more control over the raw materials that have driven the Asian giant's industrial expansion in recent years.

But Xiong said there were also benefits for Australia, estimating the plan would see more than seven billion US dollars directly invested in the country.

"Hopefully the deal will be beneficial to Australia in terms of helping it withstand the impact of the global financial crisis and to its economic recovery," he told reporters.

Xiong will meet officials from Australia's foreign investment regulator in Canberra later Monday and is also expected to hold talks with Treasurer Wayne Swan before returning to China on Wednesday.

A number of politicians have expressed disquiet at the prospect of Beijing exerting increased influence over Australia's strategically-important resources but Xiong said Chinalco operated independently of the Chinese government.

In turn, Rio Tinto would remain independent of Chinalco if the deal proceeded, he said.

"Although we are a state-owned enterprise, ever since we were established we have run as a separate and independent commercial enterprise," said Xiong.

"In this transaction, Rio remains as an independent company. Our partnership in no way changes the corporate strategy of Rio or how it operates its business or pricing of its product."

"This transaction in no way leads to any control of natural resources in Australia."

The deal needs approval from both the Australian government and Rio Tinto shareholders, both of which could prove a challenge.

Australia announced changes to foreign investment laws just moments after the Rio-Chinalco deal was unveiled last month and treasurer Swan said Monday he would not be rushed when evaluating the merits of the proposal.

"This is a very significant decision, the government will take its time to evaluate it in great depth and detail," he said. "It's very important we get this right in the national interest."

Xiong did not want to implement changes to the package thrashed out between Rio and Chinalco.

"We think this represents the best outcome that is acceptable and agreeable to both parties," he said.

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From Calgary to Caracas, China snapping up resources
Shanghai (AFP) March 1, 2009
Resource-hungry China has seized upon the financial crisis to sign billions of dollars in deals in a buying spree that is set to pick up pace and reshape the global economic landscape, analysts say.







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