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Lew raps China on excess steel production
By Nicolas REVISE
Beijing (AFP) June 6, 2016


French president warns Chinese off AccorHotels takeover
Paris (AFP) June 6, 2016 - President Francois Hollande has warned China's state-owned Jin Jiang, the world's fifth-largest hotel group, against a possible takeover of French company AccorHotels.

"Accor has Chinese investors because it is also developing in Asia," Hollande said in an interview set to appear in La Voix du Nord newspaper on Tuesday.

"But I am keeping a close eye on the capital of this global group remaining diversified," the president added.

Jin Jiang has been steadily increasing its stake in AccorHotels and is now its largest shareholder, sparking concern in France that it may try to take control of the company which owns brands such as Pullman, Mercure and Ibis.

The Jin Jiang group, a rising force in the global hotel industry that is owned by the city of Shanghai, has increased its stake in AccorHotels from 5 percent at the start of this year to 15 percent at the end of last week.

French newspaper Le Figaro reported last week that Jin Jiang is targeting a 29 percent stake in AccorHotels.

That would be just below the 30 percent level that would force it to make a public offer to purchase the remaining shares in AccorHotels.

The Journal du Dimanche reported on Sunday that AccorHotels could seek to protect itself by having the French state take a 10 percent stake.

The newspaper said that while Prime Minister Manuel Valls was supportive, Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron preferred focusing the government's limited resources on supporting the struggling French nuclear energy industry.

China reaps first gold at Tajikistan mine
Dushanbe, Tajikistan (AFP) June 6, 2016 - A Chinese-run gold mine in ex-Soviet Tajikistan has produced its first gold, state media reported Monday, highlighting Beijing's deepening interest in the impoverished Central Asian country's extractive sector.

State television showed footage of Tajikistan's President Emomali Rakhmon clutching two gold ingots produced at the Pokrud gold mine and announced investments totalling $256 million at the mine to date.

The mine operated by the Pokrud Chinese-Tajik joint venture is expected to produce around 1.3 tonnes of gold per year initially, with production rising to 2 tonnes per year later, the TV report said.

The mineral concession just south of the capital Dushanbe is one of several operated by Chinese companies.

Notably a leading Chinese gold producer Zijin Mining operates the Zarafshan concession in the north of the country and expects to produce five tonnes of gold there annually in the coming years.

Tajikistan, a landlocked country of over 8 million that borders both China and Afghanistan suffers from an absence of foreign investment and looks to Beijing to help prop up the domestic economy.

Remittances from over a million nationals working in Russia have fallen sharply on the back of a contagious financial crisis prompted by Western sanctions against Moscow and falling oil prices.

Chinese oversupply of steel is "damaging and distorting" global markets, US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said Monday, joining a chorus of criticism that blames Beijing for plant closures and job losses in the industry worldwide.

China is the world's number one steelmaker, producing more than half of global output, but stands accused of flooding the market with steel at below cost prices -- dumping -- in violation of international trade rules.

"Excess capacity has a distorting and damaging effect on global markets," Lew said at a key annual meeting between the world's top two military and economic powers in Beijing.

"Implementing policies to substantially reduce production in a range of sectors suffering from overcapacity, including steel and aluminium, is critical to the function and stability of international markets."

Lew's comments echo those of other senior officials around the world who have blamed the Chinese supply glut for turmoil in Europe and elsewhere.

Among those hit has been Indian-owned Tata Steel, which said in March it was selling its struggling British assets -- putting 15,000 jobs at risk.

At Group of Seven summit talks in Japan last month world leaders said the global steel oversupply must be "urgently addressed", in what was seen as a barely disguised jab at China.

The US has punished Beijing with harsh tariffs, most recently in March, when it slapped a 300 percent rate on the cold rolled steel used to make auto parts.

The EU, the second-biggest steel producer, has launched a dumping probe into Chinese steel but angry manufacturers have urged it to mirror the US's tough tariffs.

The 28-nation bloc said this month that granting market economy status for China at the World Trade Organization was "untenable" because it would cost jobs in Europe in industries such as steel.

The designation would make it much harder for major economies to fight Beijing over alleged unfair trading practices.

- Social instability -

Chinese leaders have repeatedly pledged to address the issue of excess capacity, admitting it is a drag on their own economy.

Demand for steel has fallen as the rate of economic growth has slowed, leaving producers making hundreds of millions of tonnes more than they can sell domestically each year.

Beijing has vowed to eliminate 100 million to 150 million tonnes of capacity -- out of a total of 1.2 billion tonnes -- by 2020, saying the reforms would cost 500,000 jobs.

But local governments have been reluctant to act, fearing the social instability that mass layoffs could cause.

"I don't think that we've seen the implementation yet on policies to deal with excess capacity," Lew said Sunday, Bloomberg reported.

"They made the policy commitment to make these changes, they now have to implement and execute, not just at the national level but at the provincial level as well."

Monday's US-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue in Beijing is a key annual meeting between the world's two top economic powers.

The US delegation used the occasion to call on China to liberalise its investment rules to create a "level playing field" for American investment and trade.

Concerns about the business climate in China are rising, Lew said.

"Candidly, foreign businesses wonder if they are welcome, and find China's regulatory environment harder and harder to navigate," he said.

bfc-nr/dly/eb/hg

Tata Steel


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