Global Foreign Direct Investment Hit Eight-Year High in 2015 - UN Report
Global foreign direct investment (FDI) flows rose by 36 per
cent in 2015, reaching their highest levels since the financial crisis,
according to a report out today from the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD), which pegged the increase to a wave of cross-border
mergers and acquisitions.
The UN agency's latest Global Investment Trends Monitor shows
that foreign investment totalled some $1.7 trillion and the that increased FDI
- investment made by a company or entity based in one country, into a company
or entity based in another country - in developed countries was the main factor
behind the unexpected spike, with industrialized nations accounting for 55 per
cent of global FDI inflows last year.
Strong growth in flows was reported in the European Union
(EU) as well as in the United States where FDI quadrupled, although from a
historically low level in 2014.
According to the report, developing economies saw their FDI
reaching a new high of $741 billion, five per cent higher than in 2014.
Developing Asia, with its FDI flows surpassing half a trillion dollars,
remained the largest FDI recipient region in the world, accounting for one
third of global FDI flows.
Flows faltered in Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean
region (excluding offshore financial centres) reflecting the plummeting prices
of their principal commodities exports. FDI in transition economies also
faltered, slipping by 54 per cent amid plummeting commodity prices and regional
conflicts.
The report explained that global FDI growth in 2015 was
largely attributed to cross-border merger and acquisitions, which rose by 61
per cent last year. It goes on to note that only limited contributions from
greenfield investment projects ¬- finances used to create a business or
facility where none previously existed - in productive assets were recorded,
with the total value of greenfield investment projects remaining much the same
as in 2014.
Looking ahead, UNCTAD said that barring another wave of
merger and acquisition deals and corporate reconfigurations, FDI flows are
expected to decline in 2016, reflecting the fragility of the global economy,
volatility of global financial markets, weak aggregate demand and a significant
deceleration in some large emerging market economies.
Elevated geopolitical risks and regional tensions could
further amplify these economic challenges, said the report, adding that stagnant
greenfield investment globally and outright declines in a number of developing
regions suggests that the current upswing in global FDI flows is potentially
fragile and exposed to the vagaries of the cross border merger and acquisitions
market.
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