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To: djane who wrote (6732)8/21/1999 1:49:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 29987
 
CCF investors in China may not go quietly

August 20, 1999

By Lynnette Luna

China Unicom is working to oust foreign investors from its
telecommunications projects this fall, and it appears investors may not
leave quietly.

The Chinese government has ordered China Unicom, the country?s
second telecommunications operator, to wind up all China-China-Foreign
(CCF) partnerships by the end of the year as it prepares for an initial
public offering.

Unicom began setting up CCF agreements with companies like Sprint
Corp., Deutsche Telekom and Bell Canada International in 1994 as a way
to access much-needed capital to construct Global System for Mobile
communications networks and other telecommunications projects and get
around the government?s ban on direct foreign investment in
telecommunications. It has signed more than 40 CCF joint ventures with
life spans ranging from 15 to 20 years.

Using the CCF model, Unicom built out GSM networks in 88 major cities
across China with a total capacity of about 2 million lines and made itself a
competitor to dominant state-owned provider China Telecom, said Hui
Pan, chief economist with IGI Consulting in Boston.

While foreign companies were allowed only to invest in a network?s
construction and not operate the system, the Chinese government
remained concerned foreign investors still had some control in the joint
ventures. It declared CCF schemes improper last year.

Now Unicom is telling foreign investors to get out and has begun
negotiations about how much it will compensate the investors, who are
unhappy about their premature exit from a telecommunications market that
promised high returns on their large investments.

??You won?t find very many happy investors,?? said Pan. ??They are going
through turmoil and uncertainty. They have to negotiate a way out of these
deals.??

Many foreign investors are angered over terms Unicom has offered, which
appear to be nothing more than the original amount of money the investors
sunk into the joint ventures. Some investors are threatening to sue and file
complaints with securities regulators in their countries, believing they are
entitled to packages that take into account losses in potential revenue and
costs of supporting the networks. Legal action could postpone plans
Unicom has in taking the company public later this year. In October,
Unicom wants to go to the Hong Kong and New York stock exchanges
to raise the $1 billion to $3 billion its needs to mount a credible challenge
to China Telecom.

??Investors have complained about this,?? said a U.S. Commerce
Department official. ??But they haven?t come up with any suggestions as to
what the U.S. government is to do about it. We have expressed our
concern numerous times with the Chinese government.??

Companies RCR contacted said they were either in preliminary
negotiations with Unicom or had not yet received notification from the
carrier.

Metromedia International Group Inc. recently revealed that Unicom had
contacted the company about terminating two of its four joint ventures,
and negotiations are under way between the two companies. Unicom has
told Metromedia that due to unspecified technical reasons, the cash
distribution plan for the first half of the year had not been decided. As a
result, Metromedia can?t determine how much compensation Unicom will
give the two mobile-phone joint ventures.

??Depending on the amount of compensation, the company will record a
non-cash charge that will reduce the carrying value of the goodwill
associated with its telecommunications joint ventures in China,?? the
company said in a recent U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing.
??The goodwill balance at June 30, 1999, was approximately $67
million.??

Metromedia said it could not comment on the situation because it remains
in a quiet period.

Sprint Corp., which established a landline joint venture in 1995, said it met
with Unicom in late July.

??We want something fair and equitable,?? said James Fisher, Sprint
spokesman. ??It?s important they realize the full extent of our investment
and that we receive appropriate terms coming out of this deal.??

Sprint?s joint venture never turned a profit because the project was
delayed until 1998 because of interconnection problems. The company
hasn?t made public how much it has invested in the CCF joint venture.

BCI said it too is in preliminary talks with China Unicom over its two
mobile-phone joint ventures. Bell Canada said its relationship with Unicom
has been disappointing and could not comment on whether the joint
ventures turned a profit.

??It?s been a rather disappointing relationship that hasn?t met all our
expectations,?? said Peter Burn, spokesman for BCI. ??We?ve had some
disagreements with China Unicom.??

Amtec Inc., a New York-based telecommunications services company
set up to invest in China, said Unicom has not contacted the company.
Amtec?s investments include construction of 10 GSM networks in the
Hebei province.

Ultimately, the treatment foreign investors receive in their negotiations
could set the tone for future investment in the country after China gains
World Trade Organization entry. After WTO entry, China will be required
to open its telecommunications markets to foreign investors.


??Fair and equitable treatment of existing investors will be a strong signal
concerning the value of WTO concessions,?? said Burn. ??Certainly the
treatment of current investors will be practical evidence as to how future
investors are treated.??

The Chinese government has yet to resume negotiations with the United
States over WTO entry. Premier Zhu Rongji?s April visit to Washington
resulted in China agreeing to allow 49-percent foreign ownership in all
telecommunications services, but China backpedaled later.

Reports also indicate China Unicom is having difficulty finding funds to pay
off the investors.
The carrier?s best hope may be to convince the CCF
partners to restructure their partnerships as leases such as the one
Siemens AG has structured. Its venture with the China International Trust
and Investment Corp. (CITIC), called Xinde Telecom International, is
structured as a leasing business whereby the foreign partner is not
technically co-owner of the network. Xinde provided $180 million to
Unicom to lease equipment from Siemens, and repayment is tied to a
periodic assessment of the financial performance of the project.

The Xinde-way may prove to be a viable alternative for other foreign
companies. Analysts, however, note little difference exists between
Siemens? leasing structure and CCF schemes.

Global Wireless Beijing correspondent Michel Lens contributed to this
article.

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August 21, 1999
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