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Samsonite shares down in Hong Kong trading debut
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) June 16, 2011

S. Korea's Posco to build steel plant in China
Seoul (AFP) June 16, 2011 - South Korea's top steelmaker Posco said Thursday it will build a joint-venture plant in China's northeastern province of Jilin to meet growing demand from the region's auto industry.

In a deal with China's Tonghua Iron & Steel Group, Posco will own 60 percent of the plant which will produce 200,000 tonnes of auto steel panels a year, the Pohang-based steelmaker said in a statement.

The rest of the stake will be held by Tonghua, Posco said, without revealing how much the two firms would invest in the project.

Construction at a special economic zone in Huinan county will begin in August and be completed by July 2012.

"China's three northeastern provinces... particularly regions around Changchun, Jilin and Tumen will see their economy grow four-fold by 2020 compared to now," Posco said in a statement.

"We've decided to form the joint venture... to ride on the rapid growth and better compete against local steelmakers."

Posco has been expanding in China, India and Indonesia. Last year it announced a plan to build a plant in southern China to produce steel sheets for automobile makers there.

The firm already operates a stainless steel plant in Zhangjiagang city in the eastern province of Jiangsu, whose annual capacity will reach one million tonnes in 2013.

Luggage maker Samsonite got off to a poor start on its Hong Kong trading debut Thursday with its shares slumping on opening amid uncertainty in global markets.

The stock opened 10.3 percent lower at HK$13 ($1.67) after an initial public offering, priced at HK$14.50 per share, raised a lower-than-expected $1.25 billion as Samsonite looks to boost its presence in fast-growing Asian markets.

The firm's shares clawed back some ground to HK$13.64 by the break as the broader Hang Seng index ended the morning session 1.45 percent lower.

At a time of unease in markets around the world some firms have decided to delay or cancel their listings in the Asian financial hub, which has become the number-one IPO market.

Earlier this month, Australian miner Resourcehouse shelved an IPO originally slated to raise as much as $3.6 billion, citing weak market conditions.

Samsonite, which makes suitcases, casual bags and travel products, sold 671 million shares -- 48 percent of the company -- in the share sale. It had earlier estimated an IPO price range of HK$13.50-HK$17.50 per share, with the top-end price translating into a $1.5 billion initial public offering.

Despite the weak start Samsonite chief executive Tim Parker told reporters in Hong Kong: "I'm very optimistic about Samsonite's prospects in Hong Kong.

"We're extremely pleased to be listing (our) shares here... People in China are travelling more and more and when they travel they need more suitcases."

Before the shares began trading, Parker said "we expect over the next few years to be developing our company extensively in Asia and particularly our biggest markets in China and India."

China and India are the firm's second and third biggest markets respectively, after the United States, he said, adding that the firm also has "a major foothold" in South Korea and Japan.

"Even though Samsonite priced the IPO at a reasonable valuation, the weak market sentiment negatively affected investors who buy in IPOs looking for a short-term gain," Ben Kwong, chief operating officer at KGI Asia, told Dow Jones Newswires.

A restructuring has boosted Samsonite's profit margins while it hikes spending on advertising, especially in Asia, where business grew 45 percent last year, Parker said earlier this month.

European private equity firm CVC bought Samsonite in 2007 in a $2 billion deal, following several earlier restructurings by the company, which almost went bankrupt in 2003.

Samsonite's sales in 2010 recovered to $1.21 billion from $1.03 billion in 2009, when the global financial meltdown pounded the travel market.

Thursday's listing comes as several luxury goods makers prepare to list in Hong Kong in a bid to tap the region's growing wealth.

Prada will make its trading debut later this month with its IPO expected to raise as much as $3 billion, while US handbag maker Coach, already listed in New York, announced in May that its shares may start trading by the end of the year.

Britain's Burberry is also reportedly eyeing a listing in the city.

Firms raised more than $50 billion in Hong Kong IPOs last year, including two monster sales by Asian insurer AIA and Agricultural Bank of China, making it the world's biggest market for new listings.




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Mongolia PM welcomes foreign investment
Beijing (AFP) June 16, 2011 - Mongolian Prime Minister Sukhbaatar Batbold on Thursday welcomed foreign investment in the landlocked country's resources and real estate sectors, a report said.

Batbold was speaking during a three-day visit to the Chinese capital where he is due to meet with Premier Wen Jiabao and attend a signing ceremony later Thursday, Dow Jones Newswires reported.

The Mongolian leader said the impoverished country would try to provide a fairer and more transparent environment for foreign investors, who have been falling over each other to get a stake in Mongolia's coal, copper and iron sectors.

He also said Mongolia and China should pay more attention to their bilateral trade structure, noting Mongolia's exports to China mainly consist of heavy raw materials, which is bad for the environment.

Batbold met with Chinese parliamentary chief Wu Bangguo on Wednesday and will hold talks with Vice President Xi Jinping on Friday.

He also said Mongolian companies had started to invest in China, and that Ulan Bator hoped Beijing would support these firms.

Mongolia is opening up its resources to foreign investors in the hope the nascent mining industry -- and the deep-pocketed firms interested in it -- can help pull thousands of people out of poverty.

Ulan Bator has shortlisted several major foreign firms to develop part of the Tavan Tolgoi mine, one of the world's largest coal fields with 6.4 billion tonnes of reserves located 270 kilometres (165 miles) from the Chinese border.

US coal miner Peabody Energy, Brazil's Vale and steel giant ArcelorMittal are among six preferred bidders to develop the western portion of Tsenkhi, which contains mostly coking coal -- a key ingredient for steel production.

The others in contention are Anglo-Swiss group Xstrata, a joint venture between China's Shenhua and Japan's Mitsui, and a consortium of Russian, South Korean and Japanese companies.

The results of the bidding are expected to be announced later this year.





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