--
It's game over for infinite growth and the world economy. The whole
house of cards has been supported by the continuing purchase and
repurchase of debt. Greece has already fractured the EU and this will
kill every other European government as fascism and violence erupt
across the continent this summer. The only advice I can give now is
to take cover. -- MCR
CIC
Stops Buying Europe Government Debt on Crisis Concern
China
Investment Corp. has stopped buying European government debt because
of an economic crisis on the continent, though it continues to look
for new investments there, said CIC President Gao Xiqing.
10
May, 2012
“What
is happening in Europe right
now is of course of concern,” Gao said yesterday in an interview
in Addis
Ababa,
Ethiopia, during the World
Economic Forum on
Africa. “We still have our people looking at opportunities in
Europe, even though we don’t want to buy anygovernment
bonds.”
European
leaders are struggling to contain a debt crisis that has entered its
third year and led to bailouts of Greece, Portugal and Ireland.
Officials have pledged to tighten fiscal frameworks amid concern the
situation would envelop Italy and Spain, the euro region’s third-
and fourth-biggest economies.
“China
has a significant interest in Europe being a strong economic region;
that’s clearly not the case at the moment,” said Stephen
Halmarick,
Sydney-based head of investment market research at Colonial First
State Global Asset Management, which oversees about $150 billion.
“It’s probably not surprising that the Chinese authorities are
looking elsewhere for investment. Other investors in other parts of
the world will be very cautious about European debt at this moment.”
The
euro posted its longest slump since 2008 and European shares fell to
the lowest in almost four months as concern that Greece will be
forced out of the euro
zone grew.
Spain said yesterday it would take over Bankia
SA (BKIA),
the banking group with the most Spanish real estate, as part of
efforts to bolster confidence in the country’s lenders.
Africa Investments
The
Chinese sovereign wealth fund would “love” to boost investments
in Africa, Gao said. The company is limited in how much it can invest
in Africa because the projects are not large enough to fit its
investment criteria, he said.
The
fund is boosting investments outside of China as it seeks to increase
returns on the nation’s foreign currency reserves and secure
commodity supplies. The Chinese government injected about $50 billion
this year in the sovereign wealth fund, Gao said. The government has
not made a decision on whether to regularly inject capital into the
company, he said.
“Right
now, we are busy enough, so we don’t worry terribly about
recapitalization,” he said. “In the long run, we should do
something about it.”
Poorest Continent
The
company only considers investments of at least about $100 million in
African companies and wants to take no more than a 10 percent stake
in them, he said.
There
are not many companies outside of the mining
industry in Africa that
fit those criteria, making spending on the world’s poorest
continent a challenge, he said.
The
ventures need to have a return that is on average about 200 basis
points, or 2 percentage points, more than investments in the
developed world, he said.
CIC
will buy 25 percent of former South African politician Cyril
Ramaphosa’s Shanduka Group for 2 billion rand ($251 million), the
company said on Dec. 22.
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