Cosco Pacific sets sights on ports abroad
ẻ
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Cosco Pacific says it is in advanced talks to
buy ports on the mainland and in Southeast Asia and Greece because of
their attractive prices.
The port operator, which is set to
pocket US$1.2 billion from selling its container manufacturing unit to
its parent Cosco Group, wants to further focus on its core business –
port and container leasing businesses – when the global economy
recovers, reported the South China Morning Post.
Opportunities in
Southeast Asia as ties with China improve would bring in more trade.
Some factories have left China to set up in the region to take advantage
of lower labour and land costs as well as more beneficial tax
treatments from Europe and the United States.
"We have been
pressing hard to invest in ports in Indonesia, Myanmar and Malaysia,"
said Qiu Jinguang, a deputy managing director at Cosco Pacific, after
the company's annual shareholders' meeting.
Cosco Pacific is
jostling for overseas port projects with its counterpart, China
Merchants Holdings (International), which recently outperformed Cosco
Pacific by securing port projects in Tanzania and acquiring a stake in
French firm Terminal Link, which operates 15 mainland and overseas
terminals.
Wang Xingru, a vice-chairman of Cosco Pacific, said
the backing from China Cosco Group, which operates one of the largest
container shipping lines, would help them to secure port deals.
"Ports authorities are welcoming us as their investors as we can bring more shipments to them," Wang said.
Piraeus
Container Port in Greece turned around in 2011 after two years of
losses after Cosco Pacific took control of the operation in 2009.
Cosco
Pacific brought in new shipping line customers and pier workers when
the ports in Spain and Italy were affected by strikes.
Wang said
they were interested in acquiring stakes in the Piraeus Port Authority
as Greece was obliged to privatise its state-owned enterprises in
accordance with the European Union's bailout package.
Cosco
Pacific is also talking to mainland port authorities, including those in
Qingdao, Guangzhou and Rizhao, as they were in the process of listing
their port assets on the stock market.
Tags:
Bản tin song ngữ
Comments[ 0 ]
Post a Comment