Monday, December 31, 2007

Chinese language - French supplier wins Gansu deal

BIZCHINA / Overseas Investment

French supplier wins Gansu deal

(Shanghai Daily)
Updated: 2007-01-24 14:25

Veolia Water has won a 1.6 billion euro (US$2.07 billion) contract to run
four water-treatment plants in northwestern China's Gansu Province.

Related readings:
Beijing to conserve more water
Three Gorges south lane nearly finished
Water supply to Macao and S. China city doubles

The world's biggest water company landed the 30-year contract after
agreeing to buy 45 percent of the Lanzhou Water Supply Co, based on the
banks of the Yellow River, the French firm said on its Website on Monday.

"At this level of participation it would generate for Veolia Water an
estimated cumulative total turnover of 1.6 billion euros," the online
statement said.

Veolia won a tender in September that involved seven domestic and
overseas water companies, including its major rival, Suez Environment.

Operations at Lanzhou Water Supply, which employs 2,200, will start in
the middle of this year.

The deal is the 21st for Veolia since it entered the China market in the
1990s. It was the first private company permitted to become involved in
full water service in China.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Chinese language

Chinese Online Class - Sinopec calls for new oil pricing mechanism

BIZCHINA / Center

Sinopec calls for new oil pricing mechanism

(China Daily)
Updated: 2007-01-19 08:38

Sinopec, Asia's top refiner, has called for a more market-oriented oil
pricing mechanism in 2007 after struggling last year to refine more oil
at higher cost for local consumption.

"A more market-based fuel pricing system will certainly benefit our
business by smoothing our operation," Huang Wensheng, spokesperson for
Beijing-based Sinopec, told China Daily yesterday.

Related readings:
Oil price to stay high in 2007  Domestic jet fuel surcharge to be cut
Oil companies at the dawn of competition
PetroChina output up 5.2 percent
Oil price cut, but not taxi fares

"I do not believe timing is the priority in making the decision, but the
determination of the authority is," he said. Because pricing is
government-controlled rather than market-driven, Sinopec witnessed a huge
refining deficit in 2006 due to a soaring crude import cost and the low
price of refined oil sold domestically.

As a result, the refiner recently received State compensation of 5
billion yuan as it continues shouldering responsibility for processing
crude oil to meet robust local demand.

In a public statement yesterday, Sinopec announced it processed 146.32
million tons of crude in 2006, up 4.56 percent over the previous year.
Oil products Sinopec delivered to the market reached 111.68 million tons
last year, growing 6.81 percent over 2005.

"The output volume unveiled is in line with our original plan. Despite
the heavy loss, we still manage to refine more oil and to source from
third party suppliers for rising local consumption," Huang said.

Sinopec's output is higher than many analysts expected given the huge
deficit triggered by surging global oil prices last year, Liu Gu, a
senior energy analyst with Shenzhen-based Guotai Jun'an Securities (Hong
Kong) Ltd, told China Daily. He expects a positive market reaction to the
listed refining giant's output announcement.

1 2 

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Chinese Online Class

Learn Chinese - Education key to Shanghai life

BIZCHINA / Biz Life

Education key to Shanghai life

(China Daily)
Updated: 2007-01-16 08:42

SHANGHAI: Most immigrants who have a high level of education feel at home
in Shanghai, a recent survey shows.

A government survey, covering 800 immigrants, found that most of those
with a high level of education and a stable job were leading a happy life
in the city, and that the hostility between local residents and
immigrants was subsiding.

That means not many Shanghai residents today refer to immigrants as
country potatoes. And 80 percent of the immigrants consider themselves
part Shanghainese.

The immigrants from other provinces work for 20 companies, schools,
academic institutions or government departments, and most of them have
university degrees.

Lu Jie, a 29-year-old clerk, feels more at home in Shanghai than in her
home-town in Jiangsu Province. "I attended university here and my life is
all here," she said. Lu speaks the Shanghai dialect, though with a bit of
an accent.

"Shanghai is getting more open and friendly and is full of opportunities
I love living here."

Most of those polled share Lu's views, saying the degree of happiness
grows with the level of education.

The survey, however, showed the level of comfort varies proportionately
with the level of education which decides the nature and quality of job
one gets. More than 70 percent with a high school or lower education feel
discriminated against in the city.

1 2 

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Learn Chinese

Chinese School - Torch to reach Mt. Qomolangma

   Chinadaily Homepage

  | Home | Destination Beijing | Sports | Olympics | Photo | 

  2008Olympics > News

Torch to reach Mt. Qomolangma

(Xinhua/chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2007-01-03 10:35

Beijing will make a rehearsal this year for next year's Olympic torch
relay at the world's highest peak of Mount Qomolangma, an official of the
Beijing Organizing Committing for the 2008 Olympic Games (BOCOG) said in
Beijing on Tuesday.

Liu Jingmin (L), deputy mayor of Beijing and vice president of the BOCOG,
explains the national stadium or the bird's nest to guests in Hong Kong
in this December 9, 2006 photo. [Xinhua]

Liu Jingmin, deputy mayor of Beijing and vice president of the BOCOG,
said a specially-designed torch to be carried over the world's highest
peak of Qomolangma will be tested on the mountain.

Liu said people to test the torch have been training and a proper date
will be decided sometime this year.

"The torch will be designed specifically in order to burn at such a high
altitude. And the design is in its final stage," he said.

"This rehearsal will be very important for a successful torch relay for
the Beijing Olympic Games on the world's highest peak in 2008," Liu said.

He said the torch relay on Mount Qomolangma ahead of the 2008 Olympics
will be performed during a safe period considering the weather
conditions, and the proceedings will be televised live on TV in the
entire world.

Beijing has promised in its bidding reports that the holy fire of the
Olympics will reach the world's highest peak. It will be the first time
for the Olympic torch relay to be held on the 8844.43-meter mount.

BOCOG has revealed that the torch is expected to reach Qomolangma from
the southern slope before the mountaineers carry it down along the
northern slope.

According to measurements made by scientists in 2005, the altitude of
Mount Qomolangma, is 8844.43 meters, 3.70 meters lower than the figure
obtained in 1975.

He said Olympic venues and training sites should be finished by the end
of the year.

International Olympic Committee officials have praised Beijing for being
far ahead of schedule.

Liu said 26 test events would be held in 2007, but did not offer specific
dates. Initial plans call for most of them to be held in the second half
of the year.

The plans are also expected to include rehearsals of the opening and
closing ceremonies, Liu said. He said recruitment of volunteers would be
completed by the end of 2007, and administrative procedures to manage the
games would also be finalized this year.

Chinese School

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Learn Chinese - Mesa Air, Shenzhen Airline to form JV

BIZCHINA / Overseas Investment

Mesa Air, Shenzhen Airline to form JV

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-12-22 15:11

Shenzhen Airlines and United States regional carrier Mesa Air Group Inc
will sign an agreement in Beijing today to form China's first
Sino-foreign regional airline, the Shenzhen-based carrier said yesterday.

China's biggest private airlines will invest 255 million yuan (US$32.6
million) to hold 51 percent of the Beijing-based new carrier, which has a
registered capital base of 500 million yuan.

Mesa Air Group and Wilmington Trust Corp will pay the US dollars
equivalent to 245 million yuan to take the rest of the stake, the airline
said through its public relations agency.

The new venture will begin operation at the end of next year with 20
airplanes which are mostly 50- to 90-seaters.

It will add 20 more regional aircraft annually to have a maximum of 160
to 200 aircraft, the airlines said yesterday.

China's fast expanding air traveling demand has attracted carriers to tap
the growing demand from small- and medium-sized cities.

Soros stake

Hainan Airlines, China's fourth biggest carrier in which financial tycoon
George Soros has a stake, announced last week it had applied for a
license for its subsidiary Grand Xinhua Express Airlines, a regional
passenger and cargo carrier.

Grand Xinhua, which is based in China's northern city of Tianjin, is 81
percent owned by HNA Group, Hainan's parent, and 19 percent owned by
Hainan.

It will lease five Don328s from Hainan when it starts flying early next
year.

Hainan Airlines now has 29 regional aircraft, accounting for 42 percent
of the nation's total.

HNA Group plans to invest 10 billion yuan in the coming three to five
years to build its regional hub in Tianjin with 50 to 100 regional jets.

Hainan has ordered 100 regional aircraft from Brazil's Empresa Brasileira
de Aeronautica SA for US$2.7 billion, including 50 50-seat ERJ145s and 50
106-seat Embraer 190s.

Meanwhile, Tianjian-based Okay Airways, China's first private carrier,
signed a deal for 30 Xinzhou-60 jets earlier this year to develop its
regional routes.

China Eastern Airlines Group said it also planned to build regional
networks with Hubei Province's Wuhan as its hub.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Related Stories 

� China's civil aviation industry regains financial altitude
===========================================================================
� Airline linkup benefits Chinese passengers
===========================================================================
� Airline travellers want better service
===========================================================================
� China looks to lead on no-ticket air travel
===========================================================================

Learn Chinese

Learn Mandarin online - Environment: China,US & ADB tie-up

BIZCHINA / Biz Media Digest

Environment: China,US & ADB tie-up

(chinaview.cn)
Updated: 2006-12-18 11:44

China, the United States environment watchdogs and the Asian Development
Bank (ADB) signed a "Statement of Cooperation" on Friday to improve
China's environment and public health.

The cooperation aims to explore new ways to enhance China's sustainable
economic development, protect the environment and upgrade its public
health and environment quality via policy reform, system reconstruction
and human resource development, according to the SEPA, without going into
the specifics.

China's economy has exploded over the past two decades but the rapid
growth has caused crippling environmental damage, mainly due to local
governments turning a blind eye to environmental regulations.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Related Stories 

===========================================================================
� Environmental Protection Ministry suggested in China
===========================================================================
� Gov't plans pollution probe for 2008
===========================================================================
� China might collect environment tax to curb pollution
===========================================================================

Learn Mandarin online

Chinese Online Class - China to open refined oil wholesale to foreign capital

BIZCHINA / Center

China to open refined oil wholesale to foreign capital

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-12-08 10:03

China's wholesale market for crude oil and refined oil products will be
opened to foreign investment from 2007, under new regulations issued by
the Ministry of Commerce (MOC).

Two regulations, on the crude oil and refined oil markets, would break
the monopoly of state-owed enterprises in both sectors, said Chong Quan,
spokesman of the MOC.

The government promised to open the market on December 11 under its
commitments to the World Trade Organization (WTO).

The regulations, published on the MOC website, are a response to the
promise.

Before December 11, the wholesale market of crude oil was controlled by
the government while China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) and
China Petroleum and Chemical Corporation (Sinopec Corp.), China's two
biggest oil firms, monopolized the wholesale refined oil market.

By clearly defining the qualifications of enterprises, the regulations
would promote the establishment of a competitive pattern of SOEs, foreign
companies and private enterprises in both sectors, said Chong.

Industrial insiders said the regulations indeed raised the market access
thresholds for enterprises, which are required to have a minimum
registered capital of 100 million yuan (12.8 million U.S. dollars) to
gain crude oil wholesale rights.

They should hold oil exploration permits or be crude oil importers with
an annual import volume of at least 500,000 tons. They should also have
depots with a minimum capacity of 200,000 cubic meters.

Enterprises applying for crude oil storage qualifications should have a
minimum registered capital of 50 million yuan and depots with a minimum
capacity of 500,000 cubic meters.

Companies applying for refined oil wholesale rights are required to have
a refining capability of at least 1 million tons or a minimum annual
output of refined oil or diesel of 500,000 tons.

Enterprises in refined oil supply agreements with wholesale firms and
annual sales of at least 200,000 tons or importers with minimum annual
imports of 100,000 tons are also qualified to apply for refined oil
wholesale rights.

The regulations have stipulations on the application procedures and
supervision of enterprises.

Chong said private companies had entered the distribution and marketing
sectors of refined oil products. By the end of last month, private firms
doing wholesale business of refined oil accounted for 33.4 percent of the
total private gas stations.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Related Stories 

� Oil wholesale market to be opened up
===========================================================================
� Oil pricing method to change
===========================================================================
� Crude oil imports down 20 percent
===========================================================================
� China not to pursue oil resources monopoly in Africa
===========================================================================
� What should determine the domestic oil price?
===========================================================================

Chinese Online Class

Chinese language - Carlyle sets foot in China's property market

BIZCHINA / Overseas Investment

Carlyle sets foot in China's property market

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-11-29 13:59

New government regulations on foreign investment in China's real estate
market haven't deterred the U.S. private equity firm the Carlyle Group
from buying more than 100 million U.S. dollars worth of property in
Shanghai, reports Tuesday's Shanghai Securities News.

The American company spent about 120 million U.S. dollars to buy 110
villas in Minhang District of Shanghai in its first purchase in the
Chinese mainland's property market, said the report.

The report quoted an anonymous insider close to the deal as saying that
the luxury housing, located in Kunyang Road near an international tennis
center, was part of a program named the "Zhongfang Forest Villa",
developed by Shanghai Zhongfang Real Estate Co., Ltd.

Citing statistics from the world's leading property advisor, Savills, the
newspaper said that increasing demand had pushed up the rents for villas
in Shanghai in the third quarter this year, with monthly rents in Puxi
climbing to 23.6 U.S. dollars per square meter.

Carlyle intends to lease the villas in pursuit of long-term returns, said
the report.

Investment opportunities in China's real estate market and the expected
appreciation of the yuan, mean the sector remains attractive to foreign
capital, said analysts.

The report cited an unidentified analyst saying the Carlyle Group was
cautious about investing in China's property market although it
established a 410 million U.S. dollars fund in 2005 targeting the Asian
real estate market.

The Chinese government in July placed new restrictions on foreign capital
in the country's real estate market, which were aimed at reining in
galloping fixed assets investment and soaring housing prices in Chinese
major cities.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Related Stories 

� Carlyle to invest in outdoor ad firm
===========================================================================
� Carlyle cuts its stake to 50% in Xugong takeover bid
===========================================================================

Chinese language

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Chinese Mandarin - Battery maker brings brand to China

BIZCHINA / Overseas Investment

Battery maker brings brand to China

(China Daily)
Updated: 2006-11-22 08:46

Johnson Controls Inc, a global provider of automotive batteries, said it
will be selling the VARTA battery brand in China, a result of its global
growth since a recent acquisition.

Johnson bought US auto spare parts provider Delphi's global battery
business last July. The move has helped it increase its manufacturing and
operations in South Korea, India, Japan, and China.

The expansion in China "represents a major milestone for Johnson
Controls' business and heralds the start of a new era for the VARTA brand
in the China market," said Steven Gibbs, vice-president and general
manager for power solutions Asia of Johnson.

The VARTA car battery will be produced by the firm's wholly owned
Shanghai business, which Johnson acquired from Delphi last year. It is
also now Johnson's Asia-Pacific headquarters, placing the China market at
the centre of its Asia-Pacific development strategy.

"In Shanghai, we can take advantage of the existing and comprehensive
industrial base for automotive battery development and production, and
the increasingly mature, automotive industrial supply chain," said Luke
Lu, sales and marketing vice-president for power solutions Asia.

"Using our Delphi acquisition as the base, we have added Johnson
Controls' innovative and advanced technologies and now the VARTA brand."

He also said that "in 2007, we will double our annual production capacity
to 6 million batteries from the current 3 million batteries in order to
better serve our customers and consumers."

On November 8, Johnson announced the debut of its first VARTA Branded
Flagship Store in Zhengzhou, Central China's Henan Province. It also
kicked off two image stores in Shanghai and Nanjing recently.

"By 2007, we aim to open 20 flagship and image stores in China," said Lu.

VARTA auto battery, which Johnson acquired in 2002, has more than 100
years of history in Europe and has been the No 1 auto battery brand there
with a market share of 35 per cent.

(China Daily 11/22/2006 page10)

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Chinese Mandarin

Learn mandarin - IT:China Telecom not bidding for MTN

BIZCHINA / Biz Media Digest

IT:China Telecom not bidding for MTN

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-11-17 13:49

China Telecom Corp Ltd denied on Thursday a report it might buy
sub-Saharan Africa's biggest cell phone operator MTN.

"We wish to deny the news report of China Telecom buying MTN," a China
Telecom spokesman wrote in an emailed reply to a query from Reuters.

The company was responding to an article in a South African newspaper
that China Telecom could be interested in bidding for MTN, which runs
networks in risky but high-growth markets in Africa and the Middle East.

Shares in MTN rose 6 percent in three days this week as speculation it
could become a takeover target swirled.

China Telecom's parent was in talks to buy emerging market mobile
operator Millicom earlier this year, according to sources familiar with
the matter. But the talks collapsed, adding to a string of aborted
approaches by China Mobile to firms from India to Uzbekistan.

China Telecom is China's biggest fixed-line operator. The world's most
populous nation has encouraged Chinese companies to expand abroad, and
many have already pushed into the world's poorest continent, mainly in
construction and mining.

MTN declined to comment on Wednesday on reports it may become a takeover
target as operators scramble for a foothold in Africa, where mobile phone
use has exploded due to patchy fixed-line infrastructure.

Chinese firms made overseas acquisitions worth $9.18 billion last year,
more than double the $3.8 billion of 2004, according to Dealogic.

MTN shares closed at 74.99 rand on Wednesday.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Related Stories 

� China Telecom launches European branch in London
===========================================================================
� US firm wins deal for internet TV in China
===========================================================================
� China Telecom revenue up 6.4%
===========================================================================

Learn mandarin

Chinese Online Class - Honeywell to expand research center

BIZCHINA / Overseas Investment

Honeywell to expand research center

(Shanghai Daily)
Updated: 2006-11-14 14:04

Honeywell said yesterday it will invest US$13.5 million to expand its
research hub in Shanghai as the New Jersey-based company seeks to better
support growing business in China and rest of the world.

The expanded research and development (R&D) center in the Zhangjiang
High-Tech Park will house engineering, design and development work of the
company's four key business sections - specialty materials, aerospace,
automation control and transport. The expansion will be completed in July
2007.

Nance Dicciani, chief executive of Honeywell Specialty Materials, said
the expansion will help enlarge the original research space by four times
and the number of research staff will rise from 40 to 60.

The Shanghai research center was opened in 2004 with an investment of
US$80 million. The center also serves as the company's Asia Pacific
headquarters.

Shane Tedjarati, Honeywell's global vice president, said the Shanghai
center will not only serve the China market, but also the Asia and global
markets.

"We create solutions here and the applications can be used by customers
all over the world," said Tedjarati, who is also the company's chief
executive for China business.

He said the company took only a short time to make the decision to expand
- only two years after the original center opened - because earlier goals
have been met ahead of schedule and exceeded expectations.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Related Stories 

� Honeywell wins well-known trademark status
===========================================================================
� Income of Zhejiang residents continues to rise
===========================================================================
� China aims to raise R&D investment to 2% of GDP by 2010
===========================================================================

Chinese Online Class

Chinese Mandarin - Education: EMBA program ranks first

BIZCHINA / Biz Media Digest

Education: EMBA program ranks first

(SD News)
Updated: 2006-11-07 16:21

A joint Sino-US educational venture has been ranked the world's eighth
and the Chinese mainland's first in UK-based The Financial Times' annual
international executive MBA list.

Located in the prestigious Fudan University in Shanghai and with its
curriculum based on the Olin School of Business' EMBA program, which is
offered to executives in the United States, the Washington
University-Fudan University EMBA Program is closely integrated into the
larger Fudan School of Management and Olin School of Business communities.

EMBA education has been thriving recently as China's GDP is growing at a
double-digit speed. To make its key enterprises more competitive in the
global market, the government sends 5,000 senior executives to 30 top
business schools for further studies worldwide.

Ken Bardach, associate dean for Executive Education at Olin, said:
"Having a sister program in Shanghai allows us to provide a front row
seat for our US students to the extraordinary economic development we see
in China, preparing our students to manage on a global platform."

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Chinese Mandarin

Friday, December 28, 2007

Learn mandarin - Projects proposed for strategic investors

BIZCHINA / Investment Alerts

Projects proposed for strategic investors

By Lao Ji (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-10-30 10:52

Nanning will capitalize on the 2006 Nanning Investment and Trade Fair by
forging new economic ties with investors from home and abroad, as well as
cementing new deals in domestic and foreign trade.

As a supplement to the Nanning International Folk Song Arts Festival, the
investment and trade fair will make good use of the resources of
businesspeople nationwide and worldwide to further promote the city's
investment climate.

The city will propose 158 projects for potential investors and the
projects will involve investments of 22.1 billion yuan (US$2.73 billion).

Projects related to the manufacturing industry, high-tech industry,
modern service industry and agricultural industrialization will be
highlighted by the city during the four-day event from October 31 to
November 3, said Xiao Yingzi, vice-mayor of Nanning.

She expects that a total of 135 key projects would become operational in
the four days.

The projects are related to the manufacturing industry, urban
infrastructure and the tertiary industry.

The vice-mayor said that over 750 businesspeople including 320 from
abroad have registered to be present at the fair, many of whom are
seeking investment opportunities in Nanning.

As part of the fair, Xiao said, the Nanning-ASEAN Entrepreneurs Business
Seminar will offer a platform for local businesspeople and chambers of
commerce to forge closer co-operative relationships with their ASEAN
counterparts.

1 2 

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn mandarin

Learn Chinese - Small cars focus on 1.3-liter displacement

BIZCHINA / Center

Small cars focus on 1.3-liter displacement

By Shangguan Zhoudong (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2006-10-24 08:47

China's small cars developed quickly this year due to favorable policies.
A good many 1.3-liter small cars are now available on the market
including Xiali, Fit, Qianlima, Palio, Palio Weekend and Hafei Saima.
Also some automakers are preparing to launch new 1.3-liter models such as
the Hafei Lobo, the Chang'an CV6, the Chery QQ6, the Qiyun and the
Lifan520.

The 1.3-liter car boom was encouraged by China's changing consumption
environment and favorable policies including low consumption tax on small
cars (three percent), stimulating consumption.

The increasing oil price also promoted small car development. According
to a newsletter published by the China Association of Automobile
Manufacturers (CAAM), the small car market kept a rapid development in
the first half of this year while the overall auto market recorded slips,
mainly due to rising oil prices.

......

The full text is available in the AutoChina.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Related Stories

� Ford, Hyundai recall over 151,000 cars in China
===========================================================================
� SAIC own cars get new logo
===========================================================================
� Geely to make cars in Indonesia
===========================================================================
� Gov't may lift time restrictions on cars
===========================================================================
� Small passenger cars to face stricter ELV rules
===========================================================================
� Self-developed cars need a new meaning
===========================================================================

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn Chinese

Chinese Mandarin - Foreign direct investment - FDI

BIZCHINA / Finance/Investment

Foreign direct investment - FDI

(chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2006-10-17 15:11

Foreign direct investment (FDI) is defined as a long-term investment by a
foreign direct investor in an enterprise resident in an economy other
than that in which the foreign direct investor is based. The FDI
relationship, consists of a parent enterprise and a foreign affiliate
which together form a transnational corporation (TNC).

In order to qualify as FDI the investment must afford the parent
enterprise control over its foreign affiliate. The United Nations defines
control in this case as owning 10 percent or more of the ordinary shares
or voting power of an incorporated firm or its equivalent for an
unincorporated firm.

In the years after the Second World War global FDI was dominated by the
United States, as much of the world recovered from the destruction
wrought by the conflict. The US accounted for around three-quarters of
new FDI (including reinvested profits) between 1945 and 1960. Since that
time FDI has spread to become a truly global phenomenon, no longer the
exclusive preserve of OECD countries. FDI has grown in importance in the
global economy with FDI stocks now constituting over 20 percent of global
GDP.

In the last few years, the emerging market countries such as China and
India have become the most favoured destinations for FDI and investor
confidence in these countries has soared. As per the FDI Confidence Index
compiled by A.T. Kearney for 2005, China and India hold the first and
second position respectively, whereas United States has slipped to the
third position.

In the first four months of 2006, China saw an FDI of 18.48 billion US
dollars, up 5.76 percent over the same period last year, the Xinhua News
Agency reported citing sources with the Ministry of Commerce. In the
first four months, 12,639 foreign firms were authorized to be established
in China, down 3.46 percent from the same periodof last year. Hong Kong
was ranked first with its investment totaling 5.36 billion US dollars.
Japan and the United States, listed the third and the sixth respectively,
have posted investments in China of 1.552 billion and 837 million US
dollars.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Chinese Mandarin

Chinese Mandarin - State plans new moves against loans

BIZCHINA / Voice

State plans new moves against loans

(Shanghai Daily)
Updated: 2006-10-11 09:53

The state government will implement more measures to curb excessive
growth in investment and loans and will seek to tackle other countries'
widening trade deficit with China, said Ma Kai, the nation's top economic
planner.

Measures are needed to avoid accelerated economic growth that might lead
to overheating of the economy, Ma, head of China's National Development
and Reform Commission, said in a statement on the agency's Website.

China's economy grew 11.3 percent in the second quarter, the fastest pace
among the world's largest economies. The government is stepping up
efforts to cool a credit-fueled investment boom after higher interest
rates failed to slow growth in the second quarter.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Chinese Mandarin

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Chinesepod - For east is east, and west is....

BIZCHINA / Biz Life

For east is east, and west is....

By Diego Montero and Wang Shanshan (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-09-29 16:02

Dong fu, xi gui, nan pin, bei jian  wealthy east, noble west, poor south,
cheap north.

So goes a Beijing saying that indicates the basic features of the city's
geography as they were commonly perceived many years ago.

Like most clichs, this one doesn't capture the full complexity of its
subject today. But it describes in part the division of the capital along
the axis that divides east and west.    

Only a few years ago, east Beijing's Chaoyang District government chief
Chen Gang was quoted by China Daily as saying: "Our goal is to be a
Manhattan-style business centre with international financial services as
the driving force."

Home to all the foreign embassies and the majority of overseas
businesses, east Beijing is where the bulk of the city's expatriates
reside. A foreigner may be a rare beast in most areas of the capital, but
in the east they are by no means a minority.

Service companies in the area cater to the foreign population, and
through word-of-mouth, more foreigners settle there.

"It's a fairly natural development," said Rob Dean, a property manager in
Beijing.
Like the myriad Chinatowns across the Western world, Chaoyang provides
familiarity to a cultural minority.

"I think there's a comfort factor in living on the east side," said Dean.
"That's where the work is."

Mark Binnersley, an editor from England, lived in Shijingshan District on
the west side when he first arrived but found it difficult to adapt.

"It was my first time in Asia, and I did not know a word of Chinese, so
the culture shock was massive," he said. "I really didn't know what I was
getting myself into and went straight in at the deep end."

Before long, he relocated to the Guomao area on the east side to be
nearer to other young expats.

1 2 3 

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Chinesepod

Learn Chinese online - Starwood to double China hotels on tourism

BIZCHINA / Overseas Investment

Starwood to double China hotels on tourism

(Bloomberg)
Updated: 2006-09-26 14:31

Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc, the third largest US hotel
operator, plans to almost double its properties in Greater China in the
next four years as the region attracts more tourists from overseas.

The company aims to have 100 hotels in Chinese mainland, Hong Kong and
Taiwan by 2010, from 57 now. Starwood Asia-Pacific vice-president Qian
Jin said at a press conference in Shanghai Monday that of the current
number, 27 were under construction.

The operator of Westin and Sheraton hotels is expanding in Asia, where
international tourist visitors are growing at more than twice the pace of
that to the United States or Europe. Rising incomes and economic growth
in China are also supporting domestic leisure and business tourism in the
world's fastest growing major economy.

"We have seen double-digit growth in China sales and we expect this
market to grow by that rate in the coming years,'' Qian said, without
giving sales figures.

The number of international tourist visits to Asia rose 7.5 percent in
the first four months this year, against 2.7 percent for North America
and 2.5 percent for Europe, according to the World Tourism Organisation.
Visitor arrivals in China rose 10 percent last year, data from the China
National Tourism Administration show.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn Chinese online

Learn Chinese online - 5-year program to cope with pressures of aging society

BIZCHINA / Five-Year Programme

5-year program to cope with pressures of aging society
By Mo Honge (Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-09-22 13:50

China plans to boost social welfare and medical services for its senior
citizens as the country starts to feel the pressure from its huge elderly
population.

The national program on the aging population during the 11th Five-Year
Plan period (2006-2010) was issued by the China National Committee on
Aging under the approval of the State Council Thursday.

Li Bengong, a senior official with the committee, said that although
welfare payments and medical subsidies for retired people had been
significantly increased over the past five years, demand had increased
even more.

(Xinhua File Photo)

China's elderly population is expected to hit 174 million, or 12.78
percent of its entire population, by 2010, a big increase from the
current figure of 143 million, the program predicted.

According to the program, China will integrate more seniors in poor areas
into the rural cooperative medical care system and the old-age pension
system, and is committed to solving problems for retired people with
financial difficulties.

The pressure of the aging population in rural areas is very noticeable.
About 85.57 million old people in rural areas, 65.82 percent of the
country's total, do not benefit from the country's social welfare system,
pensions and adequate medical care.

China plans to increase the number of beds in homes for the elderly by
800,000 in the cities and by 2.2 million in rural areas in the next five
years, the program said.

At present, China has 380,000 homes for the elderly with 1.2 million
beds. This means that 1,000 elderly people compete for 8.6 beds, far less
than the 50 to 70 beds of developed countries.

The program also asks government at various levels to increase financial
support for infrastructure projects for elderly people, as well as
cultural and educational activities.

By 2010, 10,000 more old people's colleges and schools will be built.

The country will, as well, encourage domestic private enterprises and
foreign capital to invest in services for the elderly so as to optimize
and diversify its investment structure.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� China halts foreign investment in brokers

� Chip makers file competing lawsuits

� Pension funds tightened up

� Market lifeless as investors cautious

� CGPI rising year on year in August

Today's Top News 

� Private firms powering Chinese economy

� Paulson takes softer line with China

� Minority culture well protected

� Deformed babies get free operations

� Thai leader: No elections for a year

Top Biz News 

� Private firms power the economy

� Central bank pleges to continue opening financial market

� Capital market reforms to 'help drive economic growth'

� Draft law to support aero-leasing industry

� China to halt imports of SK-II if problems show up again

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn Chinese online

Learn Mandarin online - IMF plans to boost bigger say for China

BIZCHINA / Top Biz News

IMF plans to boost bigger say for China
(China Daily, Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-09-18 08:47

A plan by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to boost China's voting
rights is not aimed at putting more pressure on Beijing to make its
exchange rate flexible or undertake other policy changes, IMF chief
Rodrigo de Rato said yesterday.

The 184-member institution plans to adjust its existing structure by
immediately boosting the quotas of China, South Korea, Turkey and Mexico
and later rework the voting rights of all member nations within two years.

While most countries back the plan, ensuring its passage today, the Group
of Seven industrialized countries that dominate the IMF have at the same
time been urging China to ease its controls on the currency exchange rate.

Welcoming the IMF changes, Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People's Bank
of China, reiterated that China would reform its foreign exchange regime
in a "gradual, effective, and controllable" way.

Zhou said that China is a big country and has to consider many aspects in
its policymaking.

He downplayed the role of the yuan's exchange rate in resolving global
trade imbalances.

"Structural policy plays a much larger role compared with the exchange
rate," he said.

De Rato said the move to boost China's voting share was just a
recognition of its economic strength and was not linked to any reciprocal
action.

"The international community recognizes that China has increased its role
in the world economy," de Rato told reporters. "I don't think ... a
bigger role in the institution (IMF) makes you subject to more pressures."

Being a member of the IMF, China is already under its surveillance and
the fund regularly communicates its view on the challenges confronting
the Chinese economy just as it does with all other member countries, he
said.

De Rato, however, acknowledged that more power often brings more
responsibility.

A bigger voice at IMF "would allow you to express your views but, of
course, you will listen to the views of others," he said. "That happens
to the first share holder and the last shareholder."

1 2 

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Related Stories

� China urges more developing countries' voice in IMF
===========================================================================
� IMF: China economy grows 10 pct in 2005, 2006
===========================================================================

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� China halts foreign investment in brokers

� Chip makers file competing lawsuits

� Pension funds tightened up

� Market lifeless as investors cautious

� CGPI rising year on year in August

Today's Top News 

� RMB gains before US Treasury Secretary's visit

� More peacekeepers head to Lebanon

� 75th anniversary of invasion marked

� Man rejects first penis transplant

� Female space tourist blasts off

Top Biz News 

� New regulation on IPO takes effect

� China Re plans dual-listing in HK, Shanghai

� Shanghai, Guangzhou connected with Lhasa by train

� IMF plans to boost bigger say for China

� New vision sought for community health care

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn Mandarin online

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Learn Chinese - Quick review: September 4-10

BIZCHINA / Weekly Roundup

Quick review: September 4-10
(China Daily)
Updated: 2006-09-11 10:10

Life insurance in the country

China's insurance watchdog is preparing to release new rules to regulate
and promote the development of life insurance in rural areas.

"The rules will probably be made public at the end of this month or early
October," says Gong Yisheng, director of the system department of the
China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC).

Gong disclosed that the threshold for insurers' entry into rural areas
will be even higher than for cities, due to the fragility of the rural
market.

For instance, the insurer should have outlets in local markets to ensure
service for rural residents. And they will not be allowed to flee the
rural market at will.

FDI magnet

China will remain a magnet for foreign investors in the coming years
despite higher wage bills and competition from other emerging economies,
officials and researchers say.

"Rising labour costs and international competition will not affect its
position as the biggest recipient of foreign direct investment (FDI)
among developing countries," says Kong Linglong, a senior official of the
National Development and Reform Commission.

The country currently ranks second only to the United States as an FDI
recipient, says Kong, who is the director of the commission's Department
of Foreign Capital Utilization.

Economic forecast raised

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) raised the forecast for China's economic
growth this year from 9.5 per cent to 10.4 per cent, citing strong
investment growth and robust exports.

"The economy posted very rapid growth in the first half with fixed asset
investments, exports and imports all rising significantly from a year
earlier," Ifzal Ali, ADB chief economist, said in a statement.

The Chinese economy grew a faster-than-expected 10.9 per cent in the
first half, compared to 10.2 per cent in the previous year.

"The acceleration of growth has heightened concerns about overcapacity
and the possibility of a painful pullback in economic activity," the
Manila-based development financial institution said in its Asian
Development Outlook Update.

China-ASEAN trading

The agreement to establish a China-ASEAN Free Trade Area (FTA) has helped
trade grow rapidly and the momentum will continue, a senior official says.

"The FTA is the major contributor to China-ASEAN trade growth. It has
benefited, and will continue to benefit, both sides," says Gao Hucheng,
vice-minister of commerce.

"The negotiation of China-ASEAN FTA has progressed smoothly, and work
should be complete by 2010 as scheduled," he adds.

Since the 1990s, bilateral trade has witnessed an average annual increase
of more than 20 per cent, and since 2001, it has registered even stronger
growth.

1 2 3 

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� China halts foreign investment in brokers

� Chip makers file competing lawsuits

� Pension funds tightened up

� Market lifeless as investors cautious

� CGPI rising year on year in August

Today's Top News 

� RMB gains before US Treasury Secretary's visit

� More peacekeepers head to Lebanon

� 75th anniversary of invasion marked

� Man rejects first penis transplant

� Female space tourist blasts off

Top Biz News 

� New regulation on IPO takes effect

� China Re plans dual-listing in HK, Shanghai

� Shanghai, Guangzhou connected with Lhasa by train

� IMF plans to boost bigger say for China

� New vision sought for community health care

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn Chinese

Learn Mandarin online - China's 3G standard in Korea

BIZCHINA / Weekly Roundup

China's 3G standard in Korea
(China Daily)
Updated: 2006-09-04 14:00

China's 3G standard in Korea

Leading South Korean mobile operator SK Telecom will build a trial
network in South Korea based on China's TD-SCDMA 3G mobile
telecommunications standard.

China's National Development and Reform Commission, which made the
announcement last week on its website, says that SK Telecom will use the
standard to develop 3G applications.

In addition, the commission says Chinese and South Korean firms will
establish a joint TD-SCDMA research and development centre in China, but
didn't reveal the total investment in the network or the centre.

US$10 billion difference

China's economy grew 10.2 per cent last year, instead of the previously
announced 9.9 per cent, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) announced
last Wednesday, with the difference in monetary terms amounting to nearly
US$10 billion.

The bureau revised the 2005 gross domestic product from 18.2321 trillion
yuan (US$2.279 trillion), as announced in January, to 18.3085 trillion
yuan (US$2.289 trillion).

The difference was mainly contributed by manufacturing, mining and
agriculture while growth in the services, or tertiary, industry was
smaller than previously thought.

1 2 3 4 5 

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� China halts foreign investment in brokers

� Chip makers file competing lawsuits

� Pension funds tightened up

� Market lifeless as investors cautious

� CGPI rising year on year in August

Today's Top News 

� RMB gains before US Treasury Secretary's visit

� More peacekeepers head to Lebanon

� 75th anniversary of invasion marked

� Man rejects first penis transplant

� Female space tourist blasts off

Top Biz News 

� New regulation on IPO takes effect

� China Re plans dual-listing in HK, Shanghai

� Shanghai, Guangzhou connected with Lhasa by train

� IMF plans to boost bigger say for China

� New vision sought for community health care

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn Mandarin online

Chinese Online Class - Goldman-led investors fuel Chinacars' future

BIZCHINA / Overseas Investment

Goldman-led investors fuel Chinacars' future
(Shanghai Daily)
Updated: 2006-08-29 15:27

Chinacars Inc, which provides an online community to auto consumers,
received a US$25 million funding from an investor group led by Goldman
Sachs, the Beijing-based company said in a statement.

Investors' confidence in the Website (chinacars.com) is due to the
perfect combination of the two hottest sectors in the country - Internet
and cars, industry insiders said.

The Website, founded in 2001, provides a stream of products and services,
including a purchase guide, ranking of repair shops, car accessory
information and other services that help drivers with vehicle
decorations, insurance, repair service and a real-time map online, to
attract 1.5 million registered users.

Following the latest investment, David Chou of Goldman Sachs will join
Chinacars' board of directors, according to the statement released late
on Friday. US-based venture capital fund Granite Global Ventures, which
injected US$8 million into Chinacars in a previous investment, is also
among the investors this time round. China Renaissance, a Beijing-based
investment advisory firm, acted as the exclusive financial adviser and
placement agent to Chinacars, the statement said.

"We believe in the potential of combining the cost advantage of Internet
technology and the market size of China's post-sales auto services
market," Chinacars' Chief Executive John Zhang said in the statement.

In 2005, the Website posted a revenue jump of 50 percent year on year to
more than 100 million yuan (US$12.5 million). Auto advertising and
commission fees from partners like insurance and car repair firms mainly
fueled the rise, the Website said.

China is set to have more than 200 million Internet users from the
current 123 million, said iResearch Inc, a Shanghai-based Internet
consulting firm.

In the first half, venture capital investment in the Internet sector was
US$276 million, surpassing the level in the whole of 2005.
Internet-related VC investment accounted for 35 percent of total VC
investment in China in the period, ranking it as No. 1, Zero2ipo Inc, a
Beijing-based VC advisory firm, said in a report.

Besides the Internet boom, car sales in China also boosted the Website's
revenue.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� China halts foreign investment in brokers

� Chip makers file competing lawsuits

� Pension funds tightened up

� Market lifeless as investors cautious

� CGPI rising year on year in August

Today's Top News 

� RMB gains before US Treasury Secretary's visit

� More peacekeepers head to Lebanon

� 75th anniversary of invasion marked

� Man rejects first penis transplant

� Female space tourist blasts off

Top Biz News 

� New regulation on IPO takes effect

� China Re plans dual-listing in HK, Shanghai

� Shanghai, Guangzhou connected with Lhasa by train

� IMF plans to boost bigger say for China

� New vision sought for community health care

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Chinese Online Class

Chinese language - Finance: Bank profit rises 37%

BIZCHINA / Biz Media Digest

Finance: Bank profit rises 37%
(Bloomberg)
Updated: 2006-08-23 15:47

China Minsheng Banking Corp., the country's biggest privately controlled
lender, said earnings rose 37 percent in the first half as the fastest
economic growth in a decade fueled demand for loans.

Net income increased to 1.73 billion yuan (US$217 million), or 0.17 yuan
a share, from a revised 1.26 billion yuan, or 0.20 yuan, a year earlier,
the Beijing-based bank said in a statement today. The bank's shares rose
as much as 2.62 percent, and were trading 1.43 percent higher at 11:06
a.m. in Shanghai today.

Minsheng, founded 10 years ago by 59 investors including pig-feed tycoon
Liu Yonghao, delivered average growth in lending of about 60 percent in
the past five years by servicing small and medium-size companies, such as
the Chinese units of Coca- Cola Co. The bank plans to sell new shares to
replenish capital depleted by the pace of its expansion.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� China halts foreign investment in brokers

� Chip makers file competing lawsuits

� Pension funds tightened up

� Market lifeless as investors cautious

� CGPI rising year on year in August

Today's Top News 

� RMB gains before US Treasury Secretary's visit

� More peacekeepers head to Lebanon

� 75th anniversary of invasion marked

� Man rejects first penis transplant

� Female space tourist blasts off

Top Biz News 

� New regulation on IPO takes effect

� China Re plans dual-listing in HK, Shanghai

� Shanghai, Guangzhou connected with Lhasa by train

� IMF plans to boost bigger say for China

� New vision sought for community health care

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Chinese language

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Chinesepod - Interest rates up again to cool down economy, 08/2006

BIZCHINA / Top Biz News

Interest rates up again to cool down economy, 08/2006

By Zheng Lifei (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-08-19 09:11

China's central bank raised interest rates on Friday for the second time
this year, a move many economists say comes as no surprise as the country
moves to cool its rapidly growing economy.

The rate hike, which took effect on Saturday, will see commercial banks'
one-year benchmark deposit and lending rate both raised by 0.27 of a
percentage point to 2.52 per cent and 6.12 per cent respectively, the
central bank said.

"In order to consolidate the macro economic control achievements and curb
demand for credit, it is imperative to restrain investment and credit
expansion by using interest rates," the People's Bank of China explained.

"The rate hike is expected to lead to a sound growth of both investment,
money supply and credit, and is also expected to keep the national
economy on a fast, healthy and stable track."

The bank raised the lending rate by the same margin in April, but left
the deposit rate unchanged, an arrangement that some economists said only
made banks more likely to lend as the spread between deposit and lending
widened.

"The latest rate hike is no surprise given that the economy is showing no
signs of slowing down," said Wang Yuanhong, an economist with the State
Information Centre.

The rate hike margin, Wang said, was moderate, meaning the central bank
still has room to take bigger steps if the economy maintains its growth
pace.

1 2 

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Related Stories 

� Economist: Another interest rate hike is necessary
===========================================================================

Chinesepod

Chinese Online Class - Ground reality

BIZCHINA / Weekly Roundup

Ground reality
By ZHOU WEIRONG (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-08-14 06:23

The central government has set limits on the scale of airport
construction for the next five years, but that isn't stopping investors
from Hong Kong to Amsterdam from seeking a piece of eastern China's
airports.

While the government warns that some of China's airports are being
sustained by state coffers, there's been a recent flurry of deals in the
sector. That could spell short-term losses for investors, say analysts,
but the injection of foreign cash and skills might eventually pay off.

Foreign investors will bring advanced management experience and help
local airports strengthen their cost control, says Xu Changle, deputy
director of the Shanghai-based Institute of Yangtze River Basin
Development.

Earlier this month, the Shanghai Airport Authority (SAA) announced that
the Hong Kong Airport Authority (HKAA) may sign an agreement with SAA
this month to buy a stake in Shanghai Pudong International Airport's new
freight zone to participate in its freight-handling business.

The size of the stake has not yet been decided and other airlines can
still bid for a share in the freight zone, Hong Kong-based newspaper Wen
Wei Po quoted SAA's vice-president Li Derun as saying.

Though the SAA is not in need of capital, it still "agrees in principle"
to the HKAA purchase, considering its "strong interest" and the Closer
Economic Partnership Arrangement (CEPA) between Hong Kong and the Chinese
mainland, Li says.

The new freight zone, Freight Zone Phase Two, is currently under
construction in the west of the Pudong Airport and is to be completed in
2007. It is expected to extend to 2 kilometres in length and have the
capacity to handle 3 million tons of freight when it's finished.

The existing freight zone is 51 per cent-owned by the SAA, 29 per cent by
German airline Lufthansa, and the rest is owned by Shanghai-based
joint-venture freight forwarder JHJ International Transportation Co.

Taiwan-based Eva Air is another investor who is interested in the air
cargo business in the Pudong airport.

Last month, Eva Air announced that it has received approval from the
Taiwan Investment Evaluation Committee to purchase 25 per cent of the
shares of Shanghai International Air Cargo Co Ltd held by Sino Prime Ltd
at a total cost of US$3.88 million.

Based in Shanghai's airport, Shanghai International Air Cargo Co Ltd was
issued an Air Operator's Certificate and Operation Specification from the
General Administration of the Civil Aviation Administration of China
(CAAC) East China Bureau at the end of June.

Page: 1 2 3

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� Multinationals performance

� Come, listen to the Singing Sand!

� Shanghai preparing Disneyland site

� Subway line to Beijing airport

� Airline recruits 40 foreign pilots

Today's Top News 

� Businesses to confront resources price hikes

� Battles rage on eve of UN truce

� 134 killed by Saomai, 163 missing

� Britain: China exerts great impact

� Israeli Cabinet approves Mideast truce

Top Biz News 

� Resettled farmers to get financial support

� Businesses to confront resources price hikes

� Nation's AIDS action draws praise

� China's crude oil imports rise by 17.6%

� New regulation on resettlement of farmers in reservoir areas

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Chinese Online Class

Learn Chinese online - Settle down in Beijing outskirts

BIZCHINA / Biz Life

Settle down in Beijing outskirts
(Chinanews.cn)
Updated: 2006-07-26 15:13

According to People's Daily, Beijing will divide its 18 districts and
counties into four functional parts including core area, extension area,
newly developed area, and ecosystem area. Meanwhile, 11 new satellite
towns will be built around Beijing. It means that millions of people are
likely to settle down in outskirts beyond the central zone of the capital.

Following the new urban development scheme, Beijing will witness historic
changes, with the moving out of the Capital Iron & Steel Corporation as a
milestone event in particular.

As a large-scale corporation in China with 70 billion yuan worth of total
capital and 80 billion yuan worth of sales income, the Capital Iron &
Steel Corporation has contributed greatly to the gross economic volume of
Beijing.

Many citizens raised an eyebrow soon after Beijing declared the
relocation of the corporation from Beijing to its neighboring province
Hebei. However, the decision-makers believe the fresh soul of the new
Beijing should be a city suitable for living.

The establishment of such a new Beijing will be the best choice, said
city planner Wu Liangyong.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� 15M Chinese farmers to lose their land

� Curbs put on foreign purchasers

� Foreign currency to be invested abroad

� White collars becoming tied up

� Women hard to find husband

Today's Top News 

� Chinese UN observer killed by Israel bomb

� China to raise civil servant pay

� Kaemi hits China, 700,000 evacuated

� What is Dalai Lama's 'Middle Way'

� Kaemi makes landfall; 500,000 moved

Top Biz News 

� Price hikes stoke inflation fears

� Suspension of trade talks 'a setback to all'

� Central SOEs maintain solid growth in first half

� China to widen investment channels

� China's population to peak at 1.5b in 2030s

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn Chinese online

Chinese Mandarin - Island district rolls out red carpet for investors

BIZCHINA / Investment Alerts

Island district rolls out red carpet for investors
By Mu Wen (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-07-18 15:05

An ever-improving investment climate is expected to turn Guangzhou's
Haizhu District into a hot spot for investors from home and abroad.

Located at the very centre of Guangzhou city, Haizhu District covers an
area of 90.45 square kilometres and has a total population of 1.36
million. Surrounded by the Pearl River, Haizhu District with its
beautiful scenery and mild climate has long been enjoying the reputation
of "a bright pearl of the sea."

"Red carpets have been rolled out for investors from both home and
abroad," said the district government.

The district has mapped out its ambitious development strategy during the
11th Five-Year Plan (2006-10) - to establish a "colourful Haizhu"
featuring a strong educational foundation, a rich cultural heritage,
advanced high technology, a sound ecological environment and an admirable
business atmosphere.

According to the district blueprint set for the 11th Five-Year Plan, the
average annual growth rate of output value will reach 10 per cent, while
the average annual growth of local fiscal revenue will reach 7 per cent.

The district government pledged to perfect the district's investment
environment, ranging from offering sound infrastructure facilities to
improving administrative efficiency.

And building an environmentally friendly city is on top of the district's
development agenda, the government said.

Being a central island district of Guangzhou city, Haizhu enjoys unique
geographic advantages and sound transportation facilities. As the gateway
of Guangzhou to the Pearl River Delta, it has a sound transportation
network of 14 bridges over the Pearl River, several expressways linking
to other districts of Guangzhou, and metro lines.

Thanks to a well-developed education system, Haizhu boasts abundant human
resources of various levels. There are 46 institutions of higher
education, such as Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangdong University of
Business Studies and Guangzhou Academy of Art.

Haizhu combines both the hustle and bustle of an urban city with the
tranquillity of the countryside. The river-island ecological system
featuring "a river, river branches, forests and parks" makes Haizhu a
modernized urban ecological district suitable for residence and commerce.

With a long history of more than 2,000 years, the district boasts a rich
cultural heritage. The relic of Huangpu Ancient Port in the district was
the departure port for the "Silk Road at Sea" in ancient times.

As part of the preparations for the ongoing visit of the Swedish merchant
ship Gotheborg, the Huangpu Ancient Port has been renovated, and a
cultural tourism district is expected to be developed around the port.

Before 1864, Huangpu was the port where all foreign merchant ships
visiting Guangzhou anchored. And between 1739 and 1745, the famous
Swedish ship Gotheborg visited Guangzhou three times and was anchored at
this port.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� China to see 3G commercial usage

� Women hard to find husband

� KFC sullies Chinese classic

� Most generous person in China

� Top importers & exporters unveiled

Today's Top News 

� China's economy roars 10.9% in first 6 months

� Tsunami kills over 300 in Indonesia

� 107 Chinese evacuate from Lebanon

� US said to sell Taiwan 66 fighter jets

� Tsunami on Java coast kills over 100

Top Biz News 

� Nation's GDP grows 10.9% in first half

� China blacklists 102 wireless services companies

� New rules for foreign house sales agreed

� China to widen investment channels

� China's population to peak at 1.5b in 2030s

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Chinese Mandarin

Monday, December 24, 2007

Learn Chinese - Beijing more suitable for investing in than inhabiting

BIZCHINA / Investment Alerts

Beijing more suitable for investing in than inhabiting
(Chinanews.cn)
Updated: 2006-07-06 13:49

A recent poll carried out by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
showed that in Beijing's city construction not enough attention has been
paid to the needs of low-income earners. Some sociologists pointed out
that several measures had begun to cause "practical harm."

At the beginning of last year, the Beijing municipal government proposed
to build Beijing as an habitable city. The proposal was widely praised by
the general public.

Since then, Beijing had devoted much effort and money to its city
construction improvement. However, little achievement has been made. In
fact, the city's habitability has even fallen back compared with last
year.

In December 2005, the Business Weekly magazine and the Horizon Research
Consultancy Group jointly published a list on Chinese cities'
habitability degree in 2005. The list showed that Beijing's habitability
ranking had dropped from the third position in 2004 to the 15th.

On June 6, 2006, the Horizon Research Consultancy Group selected 20
cities in China and published a list on their favorability degree for
making investment. The list showed that Beijing ranked first on the list.
However, in another list published by the same company on a city's
habitability, Beijing came 19th , or second from bottom.

On June 22, Professor Zhang Wenzhong from the Geosciences and Resources
Research Institute of the Chinese Academy of Sciences led a research team
to conduct a questionnaire investigation among more than 11,000 people.
The poll result concludes that Beijing's habitability has dropped to 63.8
points, just passing the qualified mark.

By analyzing the poll result, researchers found that people earning a
monthly income of over 10,000 yuan was most satisfied with the city's
habitability, while families earning 3,000 yuan or less were "most
unsatisfied" with the city's habitability.

Regarding the correlation between people's sense of habitability and
their monthly income, researchers explained that at present, Beijing's
city construction work had not provided much convenience to low-income
earners. This had caused a negative impact on their living quality that
covered nearly every aspect of their life, including daily life,
transportation, safety issue, health and comfort.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� DINK continue to be childless?

� China to pour US$20b into west

� Shanghai closes Xiangyang Road market

� Only cohabiting during weekends

� Fascinated by bulletproof cars

Today's Top News 

� N.Korea confirms missile tests, vows more launches

� Zidane steers France to World Cup final

� Chinese cars target US auto show

� Rebel with a mouse

� N.Korea confirms missile tests; sanctions opposed

Top Biz News 

� Report shows income tax problems

� Foreign firms should be compelled to unionize

� High-income group intends to buy more houses

� China to widen investment channels

� China's population to peak at 1.5b in 2030s

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn Chinese

Chinese Mandarin - LCD investment rises in the mainland

BIZCHINA / Investment Alerts

LCD investment rises in the mainland
(Shanghai Daily)
Updated: 2006-06-27 11:43

Oversea giants including LG Philips and major Taiwan firms are increasing
investment to build LCD module plants and capitalize on a Chinese
mainland market worth US$2.3 billion.

The growing demand for liquid crystal display units is based largely on
surging sales of computers and flat panel TVs.

Analysts, however, warned that module plants generate limited profit and
that the supply of large-size, high-margin LCD panels will depend on
imports for the next few years.

LG Philips LCD, the world's biggest LCD panel maker, said recently it had
signed a preliminary agreement to build a new LCD module plant in
Guangzhou, Guangdong Province. Meanwhile, Taiwan-based Mindtech
Investments Ltd announced a US$95 million joint deal with Shanghai SVA to
establish an LCD module plant in Shanghai.

"The Shanghai-based plant will operate in line with our other new
production facilities," SVA, which plans to invest several billion
dollars by 2010 to build more advanced LCD panel manufacturing lines,
said in a statement delivered to Shanghai Daily yesterday.

"LCD module manufacturing requires little technology," said Yue Ting, an
analyst at Beijing-based CCID Consulting Co, a research f irm under the
Ministry of Information Industry. "For large LCD TV panels, including 32
inch, 37 inch and even bigger models, China still depends on imports."

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� Only cohabiting during the weekends

� Divorce rise, reforms linked

� Raise threshold for auto exports

� Medicine exports face challenges

� Macro economy suffers 'difficult time'

Today's Top News 

� China urges North Korea not to test missile

� Beijing tops Shanghai in cost-of-living

� Hu inspects the Second Artillery Force

� China opens space center to reporters

� China central banker urges reserve diversification

Top Biz News 

� Mainland, Macao to strengthen co-op

� China's budget targets education, environment

� Income gap indicates China's economy status quo

� China to widen investment channels

� China's population to peak at 1.5b in 2030s

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Chinese Mandarin

Chinese Online Class - H5N1 virus may have mutated

BIZCHINA / Center

H5N1 virus may have mutated
By Teddy Ng and Chen Hong (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-06-17 09:01

The latest human bird flu infection on the Chinese mainland is worrying
as it shows the H5N1 virus may have mutated and become as infectious in
warm months as in cooler ones, Hong Kong's health chief said on Friday.

The virus thrives in lower temperatures and is usually most infectious in
the cooler months between October and March.

But confirmation on Thursday that a 31-year-old truck driver in the
southern city of Shenzhen has been infected has caused uneasiness.

"Is this because the virus has changed, so that it is highly infectious
all year round? Or, if it is happening in summer, winter would be even
worse?" said the Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food, York Chow.

He said the virus might have become "more virulent and spread wider than
we've expected," though its mutation was not confirmed.

"If that is the case, the risk for humans to be infected in the future is
higher," he added.

The truck driver was admitted to hospital and was critically ill on
Friday. He had visited a market where live poultry was sold and eaten
chicken before he fell ill. But he is not known to have had any other
close contact with poultry.

University of Hong Kong microbiology head Yuen Kwok-yung said the
Shenzhen case was abnormal and worried the disease would spread in winter.

"If there are human infections from June to August, it means the virus is
extremely active. I am worried that a major outbreak will happen in
winter," he said.

In neighbouring Shenzhen, authorities have stepped up virus prevention
and surveillance efforts.

The local government said it will now report the situation relating to
human bird flu cases every day.

The Shenzhen Centre for Disease Control and Prevention has been asked to
enhance its surveillance of any pneumonia-like cases.

So far the city has not reported any poultry infections.

But vendors said they are required to disinfect shelves twice a day and
stop on-the-spot slaughtering. Some supermarkets have stopped selling
live chickens.

"Business is really bad. I didn't even sell one chicken today," said a
vendor at a Xiangmei Road market.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Related Stories

� Shenzhen man bird flu confirmed
===========================================================================

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� Iron lady faces latest challenge

� Avoid becoming a 'World Cup Widow'

� Great Wall needs urgent protection

� China's oil imports rise 19 percent

� Copper price falls to new low

Today's Top News 

� China boosts commercial banks' reserve ratios

� Hu gets to Almaty for security session

� H5N1 virus may have mutated - expert

� Strategic oil reserve due for completion

� SCO 'committed to peace, prosperity'

Top Biz News 

� Bank reserve raised to cool down investment

� First strategic oil reserve due for completion by August

� Fair highlights Sino-Russian business ties

� China to 'fine tune' monetary policy

� China's CITIC Bank seeking to list in HK

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Chinese Online Class

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Learn Chinese online - Texas Pacific to expand Chinese high-tech sectors

BIZCHINA / Overseas Investment

Texas Pacific to expand Chinese high-tech sectors
(China Daily)
Updated: 2006-06-10 10:03

Texas Pacific, a US private equity giant, is planning to pour hundreds of
millions of US dollars into China's high-tech, services, and new energy
sectors in the next three to five years.

The entity will invest in at least five projects a year with the average
investment on a single project ranging from US$5 million to US$75
million, said Sing Wang, its newly appointed partner for its North Asia
business operations.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� Firm in talks for China Unicom

� Baihetan hydropower station approved

� Godfather of information industry

� Case against man-bags

� Luxury cars are big boys' toys

Today's Top News 

� Host Germany opens World Cup with win

� Floods death toll rises to 93, 12 missing

� US approves cervical cancer vaccine

� Cathay Pacific takes over Dragonair

� US shows photos of battered al-Zarqawi

Top Biz News 

� Official rejects claims over Africa policy

� Cathay Pacific takes over Dragonair

� CSRC extends penalty to senior management

� China's economy no cooling signs

� SAFE lifts forex quotas

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn Chinese online

Learn mandarin - French firm opens R&D centre in Beijing

BIZCHINA / Overseas Investment

French firm opens R&D centre in Beijing
By Zhang Di (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-06-06 10:07

French company 6WIND launched a research and development (R&D) centre in
Beijing yesterday to more effectively capitalize on the IPv6 market in
China.

The leading provider of key IPv6 networking software will increase its
headcount in the centre from six to 25 by the end of this year, but
declined to specify the amount invested.

The new centre aims to enhance the speed of delivery of its software
products to local customers, said Alain Daste, chief executive officer of
6WIND.

"With the help of our software, clients here can develop their networking
equipment and systems more quickly," he said.

Daste also attributed the launch of the centre in Beijing to the
opportunities brought by the good IPv6 technology environment in China.

IPv6, the sixth version of Internet protocol, is the next-generation
Internet technology and will integrate the Internet, wireless and mobile
communications networks.

"The ecosystem for the IPv6 community and industry is gaining momentum,
especially in Asia and China," said Jesse Zhang, managing director of
6WIND China.

China has built up its CERNET (China Education and Research Network) 1
and 2, two IPv6-based backbone networks, together with Chinese telecoms
operators.

In May 2005, the Ministry of Information Industry and the French Ministry
of Industry signed a memorandum of understanding on IPv6 co-operation
between the two countries.

Zhang said: "China and other Asian countries are far ahead of anywhere
else in the world in terms of technology applications, which is
illustrated by the popularity of text messaging and peer-to-peer
technologies."

6WIND has strong expertise in the development of value-added applications
for IPv6 technology and can help Chinese customers make the transition
from IPv4, which is in use on the current Internet, to IPv6, he said.

The Beijing R&D centre will work closely with the company's local
customers and research institutions, like the Chinese Academy of Science,
and universities.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� Luxury cars are big boys' toys

� Full speed ahead for Shanghai express

� Godfather of information industry

� Individual gold transactions in China brisk

� China closes over 2,600 enterprises

Today's Top News 

� Official: SCO not an eastern version of NATO

� 9.5 million sit college exam this year

� Tianjin gets the nod for new-area plan

� Malformed baby has third arm removed

� Doctors remove third arm from boy

Top Biz News 

� BOC gears up for largest mainland IPO

� Central bank denies issuing 500-yuan notes

� Over 60% of land use in Chinese cities illegal

� Wen, Merkel discuss nuclear issue by phone

� Nuke fusion reactor gives a headstart

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn mandarin

Chinese Mandarin - Dell completes second high-tech factory in Xiamen

BIZCHINA / Overseas Investment

Dell completes second high-tech factory in Xiamen

Updated: 2006-05-31 10:20

Dell, a world personal computer giant, on Tuesday completed the building
of its second factory in China, enabling it to double its annual
production capacity in the country.

The two factories, both in Xiamen, a coastal city in east China's Fujian
Province, make China the third largest manufacturing base globally.

The two factories will contribute to eight to 10 percent of Dell's global
production capacity when the second plant goes into full operation.The
new factory produces 7 million computers annually, a source with Dell
said.

"China has become Dell's fifth largest market," said Stephen J. Felice,
president of Dell Asia-Pacific and Japan.  "Its huge market potential has
been fuelling the rapid growth of Dell's business in Asia."

Dell's output in China last quarter increased by 40 percentage points
compared with figures a year ago and the sales revenue rose by 29
percentage points.

Computers from the new factory will be sold in Hong Kong, Japan and the
Republic of Korea among other regions, while its first factory mainly
supplies the Chinese mainland, said sources with Dell.

New technologies in the second factory have raised production efficiency
by 30 percent, said Li Yuanjun, general manager of Dell China's Customer
Service Center.
Dell also has a design center in Shanghai.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� Luxury cars are big boys' toys

� Full speed ahead for Shanghai express

� Godfather of information industry

� Individual gold transactions in China brisk

� China closes over 2,600 enterprises

Today's Top News 

� Official: SCO not an eastern version of NATO

� 9.5 million sit college exam this year

� Tianjin gets the nod for new-area plan

� Malformed baby has third arm removed

� Doctors remove third arm from boy

Top Biz News 

� BOC gears up for largest mainland IPO

� Central bank denies issuing 500-yuan notes

� Over 60% of land use in Chinese cities illegal

� Wen, Merkel discuss nuclear issue by phone

� Nuke fusion reactor gives a headstart

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Chinese Mandarin

Chinese Mandarin - Yuan breaks key 8.0 to the dollar

BIZCHINA / Worldwide Reaction

Yuan breaks key 8.0 to the dollar
(AFP)
Updated: 2006-05-16 10:04

China's yuan strengthened to close below the psychologically important
eight to the dollar for the first time since last year's revaluation
aimed at greater exchange rate flexibility.

"There's definitely a trend for the yuan to rise in value in future,"
said Sun Lijian, an economist at Shanghai's Fudan University. "But it's
not going to be as fast as many believe."

There is only so much change the Chinese economy can absorb and the
banking sector in particular needs a stable environment to carry out
much-needed reform, he argued Monday.

The yuan ended at 7.9976 to the dollar on the local currency exchange
after a parity rate of 7.9982 had been announced by the National Foreign
Exchange Center early in the day.

In a joint statement after a Sino- European Union financial dialogue
Monday, Beijing reiterated that it would continue to free up the yuan but
again refrained from revealing the pace.

"China will further improve the yuan exchange rate formation mechanism
and constantly make the exchange rate more responsive to market supply
and demand," the statement said.

China will "strengthen aggregate control, improving the credit structure
with market instruments, advancing the yuan exchange rate regime and
market-based interest rate reform."

It is 12 years since the yuan -- under a different foreign exchange
regime -- was last traded at this side of the 8.000 level. The
strengthening comes amid persistent calls for China to act to cut its
massive trade surpluses.

"There's a lot of money floating around the world these days," said Zuo
Xiaolei, chief economist with Galaxy Securities. "And it's already a
while since the yuan started being seen as an asset set to appreciate."

However, the forces of international finance are up against a powerful
player in the form of the Chinese state in all its fierce determination
to keep the yuan under control.

China officially allows market forces a say in determining the exchange
rate, but only permits the yuan to fluctuate inside a 0.3 percent band
around the dollar parity rate within each trading day.

The central bank is known to intervene routinely and heavily and the
appreciation since July's revaluation has been at a snail's pace --
disappointing those, chiefly the United States, who had hoped for faster
change.

Many economists believe the rate at any particular point in time reflects
not so much supply and demand in the market, as policymakers' wishes --
specifically for the yuan to strengthen in a controlled and gradual
fashion.

"The timing is good," said Andy Xie, Hong Kong-based chief economist with
Morgan Stanley of the key move through the 8.00 yuan barrier.

"It gives the impression that the action taken is not under the pressure
of outsiders but just a normal action."

He noted that the move on the yuan followed the release last week of a
semi-annual US Treasury report into global currency policies which
stopped short of labeling China a currency manipulator.

The move also followed the politically charged visit of President Hu
Jintao to the United States last month when his agenda was topped by
trade and currency issues.

A US finding of manipulation could have opened the way for sanctions
against Beijing on the yuan, which Washington feels is massively
undervalued and gives China an unfair trade advantage.

Beijing has insisted that while it wants to move to a more market-based
forex system, any change will be gradual and measured against its own
best interests.

The central parity rate is a weighted average price based on offers made
each morning by the 11 market makers in the over-the-counter market.

Last July Beijing scrapped the yuan's 11-year-old peg to the dollar in
favor of a link to a basket of currencies, allowing it to rise 2.1
percent against the US unit to give an initial level of 8.11.

The modest, one-step move was intended to rein in hot money inflows,
reduce the cost of mopping up excess liquidity and publicly address the
country's rising and politically sensitive trade surpluses, especially
with the United States.

Since then the yuan has appreciated only by a fraction a day and well
below the maximum percentages allowed under the basket system, sparking
concerns Beijing would not allow the unit under the 8.00 yuan barrier.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� Cities may alleviate housing woes

� Rural labor shortage beginning to be felt

� Xie Qihua: Made of Steel

� ICBC to open subsidiary in Moscow

� Good news in desertification control

Today's Top News 

� Russia, China close ranks in Central Asia

� China emerging from shadows of AIDS

� Court hears last appeal for fugitive Lai

� Taiwan's 'security report' hurts peace

� Yangtze river 'cancerous' with pollution

Top Biz News 

� Carrefour keeps pace with expansion

� In real-estate market, small now beautiful

� New moves to steer car sector stability

� Water consumption for per unit of GDP to drop 30%

� China, Japan start forum on energy saving cooperation

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Chinese Mandarin