China And Taiwan Reach Investment Accord

The relationship between Mainland China and Taiwan has been tentative at best over the past few decades, but things appear to finally be heading in the right direction. …

The relationship between Mainland China and Taiwan has been tentative at best over the past few decades, but things appear to finally be heading in the right direction. China and Taiwan have reached investment accords that will allow companies from each country to invest in the other — a move that should greatly benefit both countries. For more on this, read the following article from Money Morning.

Mainland China companies will soon be able to invest in Taiwan for the first time in 60 years, thanks to investment accords reached between the Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) the Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF).

This is literally history in the making.

Not only do the accords considerably broaden goals Beijing has pursued since 1979 in an effort to stimulate cross-Strait links, but they also remove many of the restrictions that presently hamper more direct business-and-investment ties. For instance, airline flights are going to be “regularized,” and the chartered flights that have long been the only way to move between Mainland China and Taiwan will be replaced by regularly scheduled trips. There were also important agreements forged regarding crime prevention and financial cooperation.

While the immediate goals include a broadening of the strict investment conditions for Mainland China companies interested in expanding into Taiwan, both mainland and Taiwanese companies anticipate broad cooperation in such diverse sectors as solar energy, herbal medicine, automobile-parts production and aviation tie-ups to top the priority list.

Taiwan’s vaunted semiconductor industry appears to be off limits, for now, but I anticipate that will change within the next 24 months as Taiwanese authorities become more comfortable with mainland Chinese companies making direct investments into Taiwan-based firms – even to the point of acquiring a controlling interest.

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If you remain skeptical, don’t forget that Taiwan’s United Microelectronics Corp. (NYSE ADR: UMC) just invested $285 million to acquire Chinese semiconductor manufacturer HeJian Technology (Suzhou) Co. Ltd., a move that gives it a solid foothold in Mainland China.

This is all big stuff, and it’s pivotal when it comes to investing because it forges links that many of the Chinese and Taiwanese people I’ve spoken with thought they’d never see. And it also reestablishes other previously existing links that many folks thought were lost forever.

Zhang Guanhua, the deputy director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Institute of Taiwan Studies, recently told The China Daily that the agreements are “vital to the realization of direct trade across the Straits.”

I couldn’t agree more and have noted as much for several years. I’ve also noted that any agreements facilitating that type of cross-Strait trade would likely be accompanied by an enhanced currency-clearing mechanism designed to facilitate the movement of trade-related money – a key first step that will help the Chinese yuan gain valuable international exposure and help propel it to its eventual place among the world’s leading currencies, an important goal of the Chinese government.

And that’s exactly what happened.

As part of the ARATS/SEF agreements, Taiwan and China agreed to establish the regulatory framework needed for financial services firms to do business in each other’s markets. The two countries also called for the gradual establishment of a mutual clearing system for the Taiwanese dollar and Chinese yuan.

Having such a system in place will not only enhance Mainland China’s interest in making additional investments into Taiwan, it will also accelerate interest among Taiwan’s investors and companies to seek profit opportunities in Mainland China.

And rest assured, there will be a strong global spillover impact. Expect these dealings to nurture a serious interest among international investors and accelerate stock-market action in both countries – action that, up to now, was held back by the lack of a financial links of the type the accords create.

I can hardly wait to see what happens next, and I’m already carefully studying several promising companies that could be yet another rock in the foundation that becomes New China.

I’ll be reporting more on those opportunities very soon.

 

This article has been reposted from Money Morning. You can view the article on Money Morning’s investment news website here.

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