FedEx, a global delivery firm, said yesterday it would spend
US$400 million to acquire its Chinese partner's share in their
joint venture to increase its presence in the China.
FedEx will buy out Tianjin Datian W Group's (DTW) 50 percent
stake in the FedEx-DTW International Priority express joint
venture, thus converting the joint venture into a company
wholly-owned by FedEx.
Besides DTW Group's shares, the deal also covers its assets used
to perform international and domestic deliveries from 89 locations
across China. This includes trucks, offices and customer
databases.
FedEx and DTW Group entered into the partnership in 1999.
DTW will continue to deliver international freight and operate
its merchandise distribution businesses.
This acquisition is expected to deepen FedEx's engagement in the
China market.
"China is changing the world's economic landscape," said
Frederick W Smith, FedEx's chairman, president and chief executive
officer.
"This strategic investment in the long-term growth of China will
broaden and deepen our relationship by improving access to
important markets, fuelling economic development for years to
come."
It is likely to take several months for FedEx to win government
approval for the deal.
David L. Cunningham, the US company's Asia-Pacific president,
said that after the firm receives approval, it would concentrate
not only on core cities, but also on second and third-tier cities
in China.
"Cities outside the eastern seaboard, like Wuhan, which has
twice the population of Los Angeles, are a crucial part of China's
economy and vital to the long-term growth of FedEx in this region,"
he said.
"Our customers will benefit from seamless access to key areas
worldwide."
The US logistics giant is striving to further improve its
performance in China in competition with local and foreign
rivals.
In 2008 it is scheduled to complete an Asian-Pacific transport
hub in Guangzhou, in South China's Guangdong Province, in a bid to
penetrate further into the air express market in China.
This transport hub will be the largest of FedEx Corp's bases
outside of its home market in the United States and is the
company's most important investment in the Asian-Pacific
region.
A joint study by a Chinese development research institute and
the Campbell-Hill Aviation Group of the United States said that the
FedEx hub is expected to contribute some US$11 billion to China's
economy by 2010 and around US$63 billion by 2020.
Some other multinational companies in the logistics sector also
are trying to cash in on opportunities that have arisen since China
completely opened its express delivery market at the end of last
year.
China is the third-largest trading power in the world and also
the second-largest domestic air cargo market.
It is expected to become the fastest-growing market for air
cargo in future years, averaging more than 10 percent growth per
year between 2003 and 2023.
(China Daily January 25, 2006)