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EU sets timetable for approving Chinese accounting standards
Danone: amicable resolution possible with Wahaha
China reports May trade surplus up 73 percent at US$22.5 billion
China's leading titanium producer signs one bln yuan contract with Boeing
Tianjin seeks to be site of first OTC market
Mainland IPOs may set record this year
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EDF buys carbon emission credits from Guangdong firm
More foreign companies invest in Shenzhen
China's producer-price inflation unexpectedly slows
China's market capitalization down 1.35% following stock correction
China becomes 2nd largest exporter of auto parts to U.S.
China's car sales gain on discounts, new models
Industry
Retail sales hike 15.9% on rising incomes
Mainland stocks advance, erasing losses
China share prices rise for 5 consecutive days
Chinese mobile phone users gain minor victory in fight against high fees
Domestic stocks gain for 4th straight day
Minsheng Banking leads stocks gain for third day
China's 5-month foreign investment rises 9.9%
SHANGHAI, June 13 -- FOREIGN direct investment in China grew 9.9 percent in the first five months from a year earlier.


Spending by overseas companies rose to US$25.26 billion, Bloomberg quoted the Ministry of Commerce as saying today.


In May, foreign direct investment in the world's fourth-largest economy climbed 8.7 percent to US$4.9 billion.


Low manufacturing costs and an increasingly wealthy consumer market of 1.3 billion people are luring businesses to set up operations in the fastest-growing major economy. Companies backed by foreign investment produced 58 percent of China's record US$969 billion of exports last year, the Ministry of Commerce said.


"China's large trade surplus is a result of government policy over the past two decades of attracting foreign direct investment, most of which ends up in manufactured goods for export,'' Fan Gang, a monetary policy adviser to the People's Bank of China, said on June 5.


China was the world's fourth-largest recipient of foreign direct investment in 2006, according to the United Nations. Spending by overseas companies climbed 4.5 percent from a year earlier to US$63 billion.


Investment by foreign businesses has helped to push the country's currency reserves to a record US$1.2 trillion, more than a fifth of the world's total.

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