Fraport in talks with Chinese partner: report

(Reuters) – German airport operator Fraport (FRAG.DE) is in talks with a Chinese partner as it seeks expansion opportunities overseas, the German firm’s chief financial officer told Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung.

CFO Matthias Zieschang said in an interview with the paper the company was looking for ways to expand.

“We are watching the development in Brazil very closely, where large airports are set to be privatized. And in China we are in talks about a further participation,” Zieschang told the paper, without giving further details.

He further said summer traffic has been good enough to make up for the passenger shortfall caused by the ash cloud earlier this year.

Passenger traffic in June and July has been 7 percent higher than in the year-earlier period he told the paper, adding, “If this trend continues this could have an impact on our results.”

Currently Fraport expects earnings before interest taxes depreciation and amortization of 635 million euros ($819 million) for 2010.

(Reporting by Edward Taylor; editing by Karen Foster)

Fraport in talks with Chinese partner -paper

July 25 (Reuters) – German airport operator Fraport (FRAG.DE) is in talks with a Chinese partner as it seeks expansion opportunities overseas, the German firm’s chief financial officer told Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung.

CFO Matthias Zieschang said in an interview with the paper the company was looking for ways to expand.

“We are watching the development in Brazil very closely, where large airports are set to be privatised. And in China we are in talks about a further participation,” Zieschang told the paper, without giving further details.

He further said summer traffic has been good enough to make up for the passenger shortfall caused by the ash cloud earlier this year.

Passenger traffic in June and July has been 7 percent higher than in the year-earlier period he told the paper, adding, “If this trend continues this could have an impact on our results.”

Currently Fraport expects earnings before interest taxes depreciation and amortization of 635 million euros for 2010. (Reporting by Edward Taylor; editing by Karen Foster)

China’s Fosun acquires 7.1 percent of Club Med

(Reuters) – Fosun, China’s largest non-government controlled group, has acquired 7.1 percent of holiday resort operator Club Med, the first time a quoted Chinese group has taken a direct holding in a listed French company.

Deals | China

Club Med hopes to make the China its No.2 market in the next five years while Fosun is keen to invest in Club Med, whose all-in one, integrated resorts appeal to well-heeled Chinese.

Fosun’s board is chaired by the tycoon Guo Guangchang, one of China’s richest men. Using Friday’s closing stock market price, Fosun’s Club Med stake is worth 23.38 million euros ($28.14 million).

The Chinese tourism market is estimated to have grown by about 10 percent a year and Club Med is hoping to attract 200,000 Chinese customers by 2015.

Club Med said it aimed to open five villages in China by then and would inaugurate its first village this winter in Yabuli, the largest ski resort in north-east China.

As part of the deal, Fosun pledged not to lift its stake beyond 10 percent if it reached that level, at least during the following 24 months, subject to no other shareholder having or wishing to acquire more than 10 percent.

Fosun said a representative would join Club Med’s board and if its Club Med holding went beyond 9 percent, Fosun would appoint a second representative.

Shares in Club Med rose earlier this month after the French company said it was in talks with a Chinese partner, without providing details, as investors welcomed the arrival of a Chinese investor.

The stock, which has lost around 10 percent since January 1, is expected to rise on Monday when trading resumes.

“Fosun will not only support Club Med’s global strategy of upscale positioning and sharing China’s growth opportunities,” Guangchang said in a joint-statement with Club Med.

“But also use this opportunity to benchmark itself with international brands and standards in order to improve its ability to consolidate resources and manage its investment.”

In additional to financial support, Club Med said it planned to rely on Fosun’s local input regarding human resources, conference management, media and communications.

Fosun International, a company founded in 1992, operates in several markets, including real estate, steel, pharmaceuticals, mining and retail.

It has directly or indirectly invested in more than 100 companies, including Sinopharm Group, China’s largest distributor of pharmaceutical products, outdoor advertiser Focus Media Holding and Nanjing Iron & Steel.

(Additional reporting by Alan Wheatley in Beijing)

(Editing by Louise Heavens)

UPDATE 2-China’s Fosun acquires 7.1 pct of Club Med

PARIS June 13 (Reuters) – Fosun, China’s largest non-government controlled group, has acquired 7.1 percent of holiday resort operator Club Med (CMIP.PA), the first time a quoted Chinese group has taken a direct holding in a listed French company.

Club Med hopes to make the China its No.2 market in the next five years while Fosun (0656.HK) is keen to invest in Club Med, whose all-in one, integrated resorts appeal to well-heeled Chinese.

Fosun’s board is chaired by the tycoon Guo Guangchang, one of China’s richest men. Using Friday’s closing stock market price, Fosun’s Club Med stake is worth 23.38 million euros ($28.14 million).

The Chinese tourism market is estimated to have grown by about 10 percent a year and Club Med is hoping to attract 200,000 Chinese customers by 2015.

Club Med said it aimed to open five villages in China by then and would inaugurate its first village this winter in Yabuli, the largest ski resort in north-east China.

As part of the deal, Fosun pledged not to lift its stake beyond 10 percent if it reached that level, at least during the following 24 months, subject to no other shareholder having or wishing to acquire more than 10 percent.

Fosun said a representative would join Club Med’s board and if its Club Med holding went beyond 9 percent, Fosun would appoint a second representative.

Shares in Club Med rose earlier this month after the French company said it was in talks with a Chinese partner, without providing details, as investors welcomed the arrival of a Chinese investor.

The stock, which has lost around 10 percent since Jan. 1, is expected to rise on Monday when trading resumes.

“Fosun will not only support Club Med’s global strategy of upscale positioning and sharing China’s growth opportunities,” Guangchang said in a joint-statement with Club Med.

“But also use this opportunity to benchmark itself with international brands and standards in order to improve its ability to consolidate resources and manage its investment.”

In additional to financial support, Club Med said it planned to rely on Fosun’s local input regarding human resources, conference management, media and communications.

Fosun International, a company founded in 1992, operates in several markets, including real estate, steel, pharmaceuticals, mining and retail.

It has directly or indirectly invested in more than 100 companies, including Sinopharm Group (1099.HK), China’s largest distributor of pharmaceutical products, outdoor advertiser Focus Media Holding (FMCN.O) and Nanjing Iron & Steel (600282.SS). (Additional reporting by Alan Wheatley in Beijing) (Editing by Louise Heavens)

Honda China production still out after strike and clashes

China (Reuters) – Honda Motor Co made little progress on Tuesday in resuming production at a parts factory in south China after a prolonged and high-profile strike that has highlighted growing labor unrest in the region.

China

Japan’s No.2 automaker said most of the 1,900 workers — including about 600 interns — at the wholly owned parts factory had agreed to management’s offer for a 24 percent wage hike, with less than 100 holdouts still refusing the terms after violent clashes on Monday.

As of late Tuesday afternoon, the majority of interns had gone back to work after an executive from Guangzhou Automobile, Honda’s Chinese partner, urged workers to give management three days to meet their demands, said a witness who had spoken with one of the interns.

Those demands included a wage hike, guaranteed bonuses, and a promise to not to fire any strikers returning to work. It was unclear how many regular employees had picked up their tools again.

The tussle between union members, striking workers and those trying to work within the factory was preventing a smooth transition to operations, Honda spokesman Yoshiyuki Kuroda said.

China has been hit with a string of labor disputes at foreign companies, whose migrant workers have begun to demand better pay and conditions.

Strikes are technically illegal in China, which fears any overt signs of social unrest, but have become more common as employers try to rein in rapidly rising costs, especially in southern China, dubbed “the world’s workshop.”

INCOME DISCREPANCY ANGERS

Honda has been unable to build cars in the country, the world’s fastest-growing car market, since last week after workers at the parts plant went on strike demanding higher pay. With few transmissions built and inventory running low, Honda said it would probably keep all four local assembly plants idle through Thursday.

The company said it would decide on Thursday what its plans were for June 4.

Analysts said Chinese workers were growing increasingly impatient with the difference between their own wages and those of their foreign co-workers.

“People get angry about the huge income discrepancy between Taiwanese or Japanese workers and local Chinese workers,” said Zhang Chenhao, a China equities analyst with JLM Pacific Epoch.

“This is the second generation of migrant workers, and they want similar jobs and lifestyle as regular employees. (This strike) will be an example for other workers in China. This is quite a significant trend.”

At a dormitory for workers in a nearby village, an 18-year-old intern told Reuters a company representative came by to tell workers not to go to work on Tuesday in case of a repeat of conflicts that flared up the previous day.

On Monday, some striking workers displayed scratches underneath their shirts, saying they were roughed up by union officials who tried to push them out of factory grounds as police and reporters watched.

The Communist Party-backed All China Federation of Labor Unions discourages independent worker activism and generally sides with management.

On Tuesday morning, about 100-200 angry workers approached the factory gate from inside the compound to appeal to reporters, complaining about being beaten by union members the day before, according to a witness.

The intern at the dormitory, who asked not to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter, said many workers were not signing the contract yet because they were still angry and wanted to see how the company responded to Monday’s violence.

FASTEST GROWING AUTO MARKET

Including a small exports-only factory producing the Jazz subcompact, Honda’s four China plants have the capacity to build 650,000 cars a year, some 15 percent of Honda’s global capacity.

The parts factory, which builds manual and automatic transmissions, offered to lift regular workers’ monthly starting salary by 366 yuan ($53.59) to 1,910 yuan ($279.6), far above the legal minimum wage is 920 yuan, Honda said.

Interns were offered an increase of 477 yuan per month, from a base ranging from 900 to 1,300 yuan per month, the intern said.

The interns are students who are required by their schools to get work experience, with internships lasting between six months to a year and a half, according to the intern.

Other foreign firms have also been raising wages following criticisms about pay and conditions.

Taiwan’s Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd said last week it plans to raise salaries by about a fifth at its Foxconn International unit, maker of Apple Inc’s iPhone, as it struggles to stop a spate of suicides and quell public anger.

Honda’s shares closed down 0.2 percent on Tuesday, in a broader Tokyo market down 0.6 percent.

($1=6.830 Yuan)

(Reporting by Chang-Ran Kim in TOKYO; Don Durfee and Alison Leung in HONG KONG; Fang Yan in SHANGHAI, and Stefanie McIntyre; Writing by Chang-Ran Kim; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Bill Tarrant)

UPDATE 2-Honda China production still out after strike, clashes

FOSHAN, China, June 1 (Reuters) – Honda Motor Co (7267.T) made little progress on Tuesday in resuming production at a parts factory in south China after a prolonged and high-profile strike that has highlighted growing labour unrest in the region.

Japan’s No.2 automaker said most of the 1,900 workers — including about 600 interns — at the wholly owned parts factory had agreed to management’s offer for a 24 percent wage hike, with less than 100 holdouts still refusing the terms after violent clashes on Monday.

As of late Tuesday afternoon, the majority of interns had gone back to work after an executive from Guangzhou Automobile, Honda’s Chinese partner, urged workers to give management three days to meet their demands, said a witness who had spoken with one of the interns.

Those demands included a wage hike, guaranteed bonuses, and a promise to not to fire any strikers returning to work. It was unclear how many regular employees had picked up their tools again.

The tussle between union members, striking workers and those trying to work within the factory was preventing a smooth transition to operations, Honda spokesman Yoshiyuki Kuroda said.

China has been hit with a string of labour disputes at foreign companies, whose migrant workers have begun to demand better pay and conditions.

Strikes are technically illegal in China, which fears any overt signs of social unrest, but have become more common as employers try to rein in rapidly rising costs, especially in southern China, dubbed “the world’s workshop”. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^ For ANALYSIS on China labour issues: [ID:nTOE64U08D] For Reuters Insider video: link.reuters.com/sur37k ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >

INCOME DISCREPANCY ANGERS

Honda has been unable to build cars in the country, the world’s fastest-growing car market, since last week after workers at the parts plant went on strike demanding higher pay. With few transmissions built and inventory running low, Honda said it would probably keep all four local assembly plants idle through Thursday.

The company said it would decide on Thursday what its plans were for June 4.

Analysts said Chinese workers were growing increasingly impatient with the difference between their own wages and those of their foreign co-workers.

“People get angry about the huge income discrepancy between Taiwanese or Japanese workers and local Chinese workers,” said Zhang Chenhao, a China equities analyst with JLM Pacific Epoch.

“This is the second generation of migrant workers, and they want similar jobs and lifestyle as regular employees. (This strike) will be an example for other workers in China. This is quite a significant trend.”

At a dormitory for workers in a nearby village, an 18-year-old intern told Reuters a company representative came by to tell workers not to go to work on Tuesday in case of a repeat of conflicts that flared up the previous day.

On Monday, some striking workers displayed scratches underneath their shirts, saying they were roughed up by union officials who tried to push them out of factory grounds as police and reporters watched. [ID:nTOE64U02X]

The Communist Party-backed All China Federation of Labour Unions discourages independent worker activism and generally sides with management.

On Tuesday morning, about 100-200 angry workers approached the factory gate from inside the compound to appeal to reporters, complaining about being beaten by union members the day before, according to a witness.

The intern at the dormitory, who asked not to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter, said many workers were not signing the contract yet because they were still angry and wanted to see how the company responded to Monday’s violence.

FASTEST GROWING AUTO MARKET

Including a small exports-only factory producing the Jazz subcompact, Honda’s four China plants have the capacity to build 650,000 cars a year, some 15 percent of Honda’s global capacity.

The parts factory, which builds manual and automatic transmissions, offered to lift regular workers’ monthly starting salary by 366 yuan ($53.59) to 1,910 yuan ($279.6), far above the legal minimum wage is 920 yuan, Honda said.

Interns were offered an increase of 477 yuan per month, from a base ranging from 900 to 1,300 yuan per month, the intern said.

The interns are students who are required by their schools to get work experience, with internships lasting between six months to a year and a half, according to the intern.

Other foreign firms have also been raising wages following criticisms about pay and conditions.

Taiwan’s Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd (2317.TW) said last week it plans to raise salaries by about a fifth at its Foxconn International (2038.HK) unit, maker of Apple Inc’s (AAPL.O) iPhone, as it struggles to stop a spate of suicides and quell public anger. [ID:nTOE64R02R]

Honda’s shares closed down 0.2 percent on Tuesday, in a broader Tokyo market .N225 down 0.6 percent. ($1=6.830 Yuan) (Reporting by Chang-Ran Kim in TOKYO; Don Durfee and Alison Leung in HONG KONG; Fang Yan in SHANGHAI, and Stefanie McIntyre; Writing by Chang-Ran Kim; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Bill Tarrant)

Miners lead share market higher

The Australian share market has been pushed higher by strong gains in the mining sector.

The ASX 200′s resources sub-index ended the day more than 1.5 per cent higher.

The most stunning gain was by Gindalbie Metals, after its Chinese partner Ansteel signed-off on a long-term deal to buy iron ore worth up to $70 billion.

Gindalbie’s shares surged more than 7 per cent to $1.18 by the close.

The world’s biggest miner, BHP Billiton, gained almost 2.5 per cent to $44.41 after shifting most of its iron ore sales onto shorter-term contracts.

Its Brazillian rival Vale also announced a similar move to quarterly contracts.

Rio Tinto followed the other miners higher, gaining more than 1 per cent despite jail terms of between seven and 14 years being handed to its four former executives who were yesterday convicted by a Chinese court of taking bribes and stealing commercial secrets.

Australia’s largest supplier of agricultural chemicals, Nufarm, fell 6.5 per cent after a stock exchange filing revealed its managing director had sold off three million of his shares in the company, triggering downgrades by several analysts.

Telstra also weighed on the market, as it continued its slide back towards $3.

The nation’s biggest telco ended the day 1.3 per cent lower at $3.02.

Overall, the All Ordinaries closed 20 points higher at 4,927, and the ASX 200 also gained 20 points to close at 4,917.

Currencies and commodities

West Texas crude oil was worth $US82.26 a barrel at about 5:00pm (AEDT), while Tapis was fetching $US81.97.

Spot gold was worth just over $US1,110 an ounce.

The Australian dollar had climbed to 91.90 US cents.

On the cross rates, it was at 84.91 Japanese yen, 68.11 euro cents, 61.22 British pence, and $NZ1.293.