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Asia Digest: OpenAI-backer Boman wins China licence Ares buys majority stake in Aussie firm
Deal Street Asia | English | News | Dec. 10, 2025 | UndeterminedMergers & Acquisitions
Australia’s Boman Group has obtained a Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (QFII) licence from China’s securities regulator, allowing its asset management arm, Boman Asset Management, to invest directly in renminbi-denominated products in secondary markets. These products include listed shares, bonds, mutual funds, and exchange-traded derivatives. Boman Group plans to introduce about 1 billion yuan (approximately $140 million) of offshore institutional capital initially, targeting fast-growing Chinese companies, pre-IPO firms, and undervalued domestic businesses. The company established its China headquarters in Tianjin’s TEDA development zone in November 2024 and is also seeking a private equity fund manager licence to broaden its onshore offerings.
Separately, US alternative asset manager Ares Management Corp has agreed to acquire a majority stake in Australian work boot manufacturer Redback Boot Company. This marks Ares’ first private equity investment in Australia, with the deal expected to close in the first quarter of 2026, pending usual conditions. Redback Boot Company, founded in 1989, produces work boots in Sydney and supplies clients such as the Australian Defence Force and international distributors. Managing director Matt Cloros will retain a significant equity position and continue managing daily operations. Ares plans to support Redback’s growth by expanding manufacturing capacity, enhancing its supply chain, and accelerating market growth in Australia and overseas. Redback aims to increase its annual production beyond 650,000 pairs and develop new product lines to meet evolving customer needs. As of September 30, Ares managed over $595 billion in assets across credit, real estate, private equity, and infrastructure.
(经济观察)定调2026年经济工作 中央政治局会议传递有力信号
(Economic Observation) Setting the Tone for 2026 Economic Work: Central Political Bureau Meeting Sends Strong Signal
China Daily | Local Language | News | Dec. 10, 2025 | UndeterminedEconomic Growth
On December 8, 2025, the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee convened to analyze and plan economic work for 2026, signaling a strong commitment to ensuring a successful start to the 15th Five-Year Plan. The meeting reviewed 2025, noting that despite challenges, China’s economy grew by 5.2 percent year-on-year in the first three quarters, ranking among the top globally. Key achievements include surpassing the 2024 annual GDP of the world’s third-largest economy by the third quarter and sustained growth in high-tech manufacturing, with the PMI above the critical threshold for ten consecutive months.
The meeting highlighted significant improvements over the past five years in China’s economic, technological, defense capabilities, and cultural and institutional soft power, marking the nearing successful conclusion of the 14th Five-Year Plan. Looking ahead to 2026, the year is framed as crucial for consolidating socialist modernization foundations under the 15th Five-Year Plan. The Political Bureau emphasized the need for better coordination between domestic economic work and international trade, proactive macroeconomic policies, and enhanced policy precision and coordination.
Policy priorities for 2026 focus on expanding domestic demand and optimizing supply, improving new quality productive forces, advancing unified national market construction, preventing and resolving risks, and stabilizing employment, enterprises, markets, and expectations. The meeting stressed adherence to eight key principles including innovation-driven development, reform, opening-up, dual-carbon goals, and prioritizing people’s livelihoods. Fiscal policy will remain proactive while monetary policy stays moderately loose with targeted adjustments.
Economists predict 2026 will see China’s economy maintain steady growth, fueled by consumption, rebounding investment, and strong exports. The upcoming Central Economic Work Conference will further clarify detailed policy measures to support a strong launch for the 15th Five-Year Plan and advance toward the 2035 vision of socialist modernization.
Trade to deepen Sino-French ties
China Daily | English | News | Dec. 10, 2025 | Shifting Geopolitical Alliances
China and France are poised to strengthen their economic ties through enhanced trade, investment, and industrial cooperation amid China's ongoing manufacturing transformation and shift toward services, energy transition, and digitalization. Trade between the two countries grew 4.1 percent year-on-year to $68.75 billion in the first ten months of 2025, with cumulative two-way investment surpassing $27 billion. French companies see significant opportunities in China's green and innovation-driven growth, focusing on energy transition, climate governance, industrial upgrading, and the digital economy.
French industrial group Schneider Electric, with multiple operations across China, is deepening collaborations in electrification and digitalization, partnering with Chinese firms to develop advanced energy infrastructure in third-party markets like the Middle East and Southeast Asia. The company is also working with Chinese battery and electric vehicle charging manufacturers to introduce Chinese energy storage technologies to Europe and global markets, supporting the worldwide green transition. Schneider Electric aims to expand its engagement in China and collaborate internationally using China-developed solutions.
Club Med, a Paris-based travel and lifestyle brand and subsidiary of China's Fosun International, plans to further expand in China by growing its customer base and product innovation with a focus on local cultural integration. The company intends to increase its portfolio of "all-inclusive" mountain and beach resorts, including new ski resort projects in Xinjiang and sun-and-beach developments in Sanya, Hainan. Club Med’s sales revenue in mainland China rose over 11 percent in the latter half of fiscal 2025, boosted by a surge in inbound tourism revenues exceeding 10 million euros.
Other French companies, such as Air Liquide SA, are also increasing investments in China. Air Liquide is investing 25 million euros to upgrade its air separation plant in Shaanxi province with an electricity-powered unit expected by 2027 to reduce carbon emissions significantly. CEO Rui Coelho emphasized the importance of China-France collaborations in addressing global challenges like climate change and energy transition, noting China’s advancements in 5G, AI, IoT, and industrial robotics align with Air Liquide's strategy for industrial modernization and low-carbon development.
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