Wikinvest Wire

Nine men and their hedge fund

Friday, June 08, 2007

Last month, the nine men who run China siphoned off a huge chunk of their foreign exchange reserves to form the new Chinese State Investment Company. They now control what is essentially a hedge fund worth hundreds of billions of dollars before adding any leverage.

Their first publicly disclosed move was to take a 10 percent ($3 billion) stake in one of the world's premier private equity firms, Blackstone Group.

Should anyone be worried?

BHP Billiton (NYSE: BHP) might be worried, according to Bell Potter research chief Peter Quinton in a report published yesterday in The Herald Sun, Australia's largest daily newspaper.

Mr Quinton said yesterday he believed the Blackstone investment was a forerunner to bigger things - including a possible tilt at BHP, which analysts have valued at more than $200 billion.

"They've acquired that 10 per cent stake in Blackstone to learn the mechanics of private equity takeovers," Mr Quinton said.

"Twelve months down the track, they've now learned how to do mergers and acquisitions, and if you were the Chinese Government what would you do?" he said, pointing to China's concern about commodity supplies.

"If they get BHP they've got a diversified resource company, they've got oil, they've got iron ore, they've got base metals."

Analysts have agreed that Blackstone will provide a good training ground for the Chinese, and natural resources are tipped to be high on the fund's shopping list.
Naturally, the Chinese government recently offered assurances that the purpose of the fund is to improve its returns on overseas investments rather than to wrest control of foreign companies.

For years, foreign exchange reserves had been directed toward ultra-safe but low-yielding U.S. debt, however, that is now changing as the rapidly developing country seeks to secure its future needs for raw materials and energy.

A recent study by Merrill Lynch showed that a private equity deal for the $160B diversified natural resource company would not only be feasible, but profitable. A huge, ongoing share buyback program has contributed to soaring share prices in recent months as the company continues to bet on higher demand for its products.


BHP Billiton is the world's leading supplier of core steelmaking raw materials, key ingredients to ongoing economic development in China.

It is also the third largest copper producer, second largest exporter of energy coal, third largest producer of nickel, fourth largest producer of uranium, sixth largest producer of primary aluminum, and maintains substantial interests in diamonds, silver and titanium as well as being a significant producer of oil and natural gas.

Such a takeover bid would raise much concern over how global resources are allocated in the longer term and may be greeted with the same sort of resistance that China's bid for U.S. oil giant Unocal saw in 2005.

Since the company is listed in Australia, where most of its shares are traded, an increasingly protectionist U.S. Congress will have little say over how such a deal might develop.

The combination of China's massive foreign exchange reserves, a private equity mania sweeping the globe, and a possible takeover bid for the world's largest natural resource company speaks volumes about the state of the world in mid-2007.

Full Disclosure: Long BHP at time of writing.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

The big picture here is that the West is trading its assets for a handful of beads (cheap consumer goods).

Greyhair said...

You've got to wonder if China is now actually diversifying away treasuries. If the U.S. consumer is pulling back, might China be seeing sluggish exports, and therefore have fewer dollars to invest? Remember that "savings glut"? Maybe it's disappearing and interest rates are starting to behave normally? If true, doesn't this sound like the "S" word?

P.S.: Sure is ugly in the portfolio just now, particularly for gold.

Tim said...

Well, this looks like one of those days when you either have to just look away or look for something to buy at a discount.

Greyhair said...

Look away indeed.

And I'm pissed at having bought that last CD the other day. The cash would be nice about now!

64 said...

Possible scenario? U.S. recession, Chinese overinvestment in resources leads to a deflationary recession, banks run into trouble, China is forced to unload underpriced assets to pay for financial bailout. See Japan, 1990's.

IMAGE

  © Blogger template Newspaper by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP