China Conglomerates Aim for Reset in Tighter Credit Environment (Reuters)
More than a year ago, China abruptly shifted from a policy of providing its private conglomerates with cheap cash to push them to become global champions, and tightened capital controls and bank credit. That seismic shift is still being felt today, as the non-state companies dump property and company stakes, and grapple with developing coherent strategies. READ MORE
Similar Posts:
- Private Equity Firms in Southeast Asia Are Cashing Out Faster (WSJ)
- China Bolsters Pension Fund as Fears Grow Over 2035 Doomsday (Nikkei Asian Review)
- Southeast Asia Set to Gain From Trade War Business Relocations (Nikkei Asian Review)
- China beyond Evergrande: Contagion or containment? (PineBridge Investments)
- How Kong Handover Blinded Media to Story of the Decade (SCMP)
- 2014 BCG Local Dynamos: 50 Emerging Market Consumer Companies to Watch (BCG)
- Singapore’s GIC Bets on Emerging Market Technolgy Investments (Reuters)
- Lazard Emerging Markets Fund Manager: Full-blown Financial Crisis in China is Unlikely (FE Trustnet)
- FPA Crescent (FPACX) Fund Makes Some Interesting Emerging Market Stock Bets (Kiplinger)
- P&G: Betting on China, But Vulnerable to FX Fluctuations (USA Today)
- The Coming Eurasian Century: Russia and China are De-Dollarizing. Is “Pipelineistan” Coming?
- Malaysia Sees Trade Diversion Cushioning Impact of Tariff Wars (Bloomberg)
- Fidelity China Special Sits Trust: Four China Investment Themes (FE Trustnet)
- China’s SGID to Become Major Player in Chilean Electricity Market (The Asset)
- Chinese Tech Stocks Down But Not Out As Sentiment Shifts (FA)
Leave a Reply