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TRADE WARS
US, China bridge some economic differences in Washington talks
By Paul HANDLEY
Washington (AFP) June 25, 2015


China's Wanda eyes big Madrid investment: official
Madrid (AFP) June 25, 2015 - Chinese property giant Wanda is considering another big investment in Madrid worth billions of euros but will face strict conditions from the city's new left-wing council, a councillor said Thursday.

The new investment could be "10 times bigger" than the 265 million euros (now $297 million) Wanda paid last year for a historic Madrid skyscraper, said the leader of the Socialist Party group in the council, Antonio Miguel Carmona.

The real estate and entertainment group owned by Chinese billionaire Wang Jianlin bought the skyscraper on the Spanish capital's Plaza de Espana in June 2014. It also wants to build a shopping centre and water park in Madrid's Latina district.

Now Wanda has "expressed its intention to carry out a third big project in Madrid," Carmona told a new conference.

"They did not give concrete details but... they valued it about 10 times bigger than the Plaza Espana operation."

In April Jianlin also bought a 20-percent stake in Atletico Madrid football club for 45 million euros.

Madrid's new anti-austerity mayor Manuela Carmena has put investors on edge by vowing to sternly scrutinise big building projects approved by the former conservative council.

Leader of a group born out of Spain's "Outraged" protest movement, the 71-year-old former judge Carmena clinched control of the city hall with Carmona's support after last month's elections.

Carmona said he met on Thursday with top Wanda executive Michael Qiao after the Chinese group contacted him to express its "concern for its investment" under the new mayor.

He said Wanda and the council had set up a commission to discuss the development and will consult citizens and environmental groups.

Wanda reportedly wants to turn the building into a hotel and shopping centre.

The commission will discuss how "to save Wanda's big investment in Madrid on condition that the project benefit the citizens and not cost city hall a single euro", Carmona said.

Carmena herself met on Wednesday with the head of another major real estate project dubbed Operation Chamartin, the city hall said, without giving further details.

Developers behind the project in the northern Chamartin district of Madrid aim to spend at least 1.5 billion euros to build 17,700 homes plus parks and skyscrapers.

US and Chinese negotiators bridged some differences over economic policy in annual bilateral talks Wednesday, even as the two countries continue to wrestle with major strategic disagreements.

Both sides suggested they closed gaps in talks on a bilateral investment treaty (BIT) following the talks.

And Washington appeared more ready to support a major step in the internationalization of the Chinese yuan, its inclusion in the basket underpinning the International Monetary Fund's SDR currency.

But there was little sign that Washington was ready to embrace China's new Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, which the US says risks undermining social and environmental standards for loans established by the World Bank.

US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said at the end of the two-day US-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue that China had agreed to hold off on interventions in the foreign exchange markets to manage the yuan's value except in situations of "disorderly market conditions."

China also agreed "to actively consider" additional steps to move the yuan, which the US has long criticized is forcefully kept undervalued, to a market-based exchange rate.

Lew also welcomed China's commitment to begin publishing economic data to meet a key IMF standard by the end of 2015.

"It is in China's own interest to adopt the transparency standards of major reserve currencies."

Earlier this year Beijing asked the IMF to consider including the yuan, also called the renminbi, in the basket on which the SDR is based. That would constitute a major recognition of the yuan as one of the 10 most important currencies in the world.

Chinese Vice Premier Wang Yang confirmed that Washington had shown support for the yuan's consideration by the IMF, a decision likely to take place only next year.

Wang also said the two sides had placed high priority on the BIT, as they weigh each others' proposed "negative list," a register of business sectors they want to keep protected from foreign investment.

The two sides committed to "improve the negative list offer with a view to reaching a mutually beneficial and high-standard treaty," he told reporters after the meeting.

- Cyber-spying issues -

The talks, which deal with a broad range of often technical issues, appeared to avoid flashpoint economic issues, like the AIIB that Beijing has launched, and the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the US-driven free trade area that notably excludes China, the second-largest US trade partner.

A key new complaint at the top of the US list in economic and trade issues, cyber-spying and cyber-theft of secrets and intellectual property from US companies that is allegedly backed by the Chinese government, was discussed, according to Lew.

The two sides "had candid conversations about standards of behavior in cyberspace. We agree that there is value in bilateral and international cooperation on these issues," he said.

Wang meanwhile said that Washington had acknowledged its complaints about US economic policy, and would weigh the impact of its expected monetary tightening on the rest of the world.

"The United States will pay attention to the impact of monetary policy on international financial systems and promised increased investment, national savings, a reduced deficit... and fiscal sustainability over the medium term," Wang said.


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