Rabobank sees recovery in China offshore food and agri deals

Medium_streetfood
Reuters | 11 November 2015

Rabobank sees recovery in China offshore food and agri deals

By Dominique Patton
 
China's appetite for offshore investment in food and agriculture is expected to rebound from a lull that has delayed some deals, given strong interest to meet growing domestic demand, a leading banker said.
 
Confidence had stalled due to slower economic growth and ahead of the release of the government's new five-year plan but should recover quickly, Wilco Hendriks, Rabobank's chief executive for China, told Reuters.
 
"There is a lot of appetite for our Chinese clients to make foreign acquisitions or partnerships," Hendriks said.
 
Chinese interest in overseas food deals has grown rapidly in recent years, driven by demand for commodities, technology and quality brands to feed the country's 1.4 billion people.
 
China's outbound investment in food and agriculture hit $8.8 billion dollars in 2014, according to Mergermarket, but has fallen to $1.9 billion so far this year, although the number of deals has risen.
 
China's slowing economy and stockmarket turmoil had dented investor confidence, Hendriks said.
 
"But if you look through that cycle, the fundamentals in our business remain solid. Maybe it will delay some acquisitions by six to 12 months but we are confident they will still happen."
 
State-owned agriculture companies and others with "indirect" state backing were also holding back while the government draws up its policy priorities for 2016-2020, but should resume buying once the 13th five-year plan is approved early next year, Hendriks said.
 
The China-Australia Free Trade Agreement had boosted interest in Australian dairy, beef and sugar farms, while some investors were looking as far as Brazil for assets, he said.
 
Hendriks said Dutch-based Rabobank, which has a global food and agricultural loan portfolio worth 92.3 billion euros ($99.3 billion), also aimed to expand lending to China's smaller farms.
 
These often struggle to get financing because government-owned land cannot be used as collateral.
 
"This is at an early stage but is one thing we are planning to do more," he said.
 
The bank was also still working closely with Agricultural Bank of China, despite selling off most of its stake earlier this year to reduce capital costs, he said. ($1 = 0.9291 euros) (Reporting by Dominique Patton. Additional reporting by Matthew Miller; Editing by Richard Pullin)
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