
CK Hutchison wants Chinese firm to join bidding for its $22.8 billion ports business
said on Monday it wants a major Chinese strategic investor to join the BlackRock-led consortium bidding for its $22.8 billion
ports business
, after media reported that state-owned
China COSCO Shipping Corp
aims to join the group.
The Hong Kong conglomerate in a statement said changes to the composition of the consortium and structure of the transaction will be necessary to secure
regulatory approval
, and that it will allow as much time as needed to achieve that.
Explore courses from Top Institutes in
Please select course:
Select a Course Category
PGDM
Healthcare
Product Management
Data Science
Degree
Public Policy
Finance
Operations Management
MCA
MBA
others
Cybersecurity
Digital Marketing
Management
Data Science
Others
Project Management
CXO
Data Analytics
Leadership
Technology
Design Thinking
healthcare
Artificial Intelligence
Skills you'll gain:
Financial Analysis & Decision Making
Quantitative & Analytical Skills
Organizational Management & Leadership
Innovation & Entrepreneurship
Duration:
24 Months
IMI Delhi
Post Graduate Diploma in Management (Online)
Starts on
Sep 1, 2024
Get Details
A 145-day exclusivity period for talks between the parties expired on Sunday.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Villas For Sale in Dubai Might Surprise You
Villas In Dubai | Search Ads
Get Rates
Undo
CK Hutchison's Hong Kong-listed shares were due to open higher just shy of 1% on Monday.
A deal would cover 43 ports in 23 countries including two ports near the Panama Canal which links the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
Live Events
U.S. President
Donald Trump
initially hailed the sale as "reclaiming" the Panama Canal after his administration called for the removal of what it said was Chinese ownership of some ports.
U.S. investment firm
BlackRock declined to comment. COSCO, Italian consortium member
MSC
and the White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
China views the potential sale as a threat to its interests, seeing the consortium as a proxy for growing American influence in a region it considers economically and geopolitically significant.
State-backed media, in criticism of the sale, said China has significant national interests in the matter and that selling the ports would be a betrayal of the country.
China's top market regulator said it was paying close attention to developments and stressed the deal would be subject to a Chinese antitrust review.
CK Hutchison in its statement said any new investor must be a "significant" member of the consortium.
"This is an interesting development. A PRC (China) investor with majority control of the consortium sounds like a non-starter in my view. An investor with a less than 50% stake you would think should keep everyone happy," said strategist David Blennerhassett of Ballingal Investment Advisors who publishes on SmartKarma.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
10 minutes ago
- Business Standard
China rolls out $500 child subsidies to boost birth rate: But is it enough
China has announced a nationwide annual childcare subsidy of 3,600 yuan (approximately ₹43,000 or $500) per child under the age of three, Chinese state-media Xinhua reported on Monday. This is a significant step towards the country's efforts in reversing the plunging birth rate and ageing population crisis. The initiative, retroactive from January 1, 2025, marks Beijing's most comprehensive pro-birth move yet — but will this amount, though welcome, be sufficient to reverse deep-rooted demographic trends? What's happening with China's population? China recorded its lowest-ever birth rate in 2023, with just 6.39 births per 1,000 people. Although 2024 saw a modest rebound of 520,000 additional births, analysts widely attribute this to a temporary post-Covid-19 recovery. Moreover, 2024 was the year of the Dragon according to Chinese zodiac signs. Children born during this year are believed to possess unique personality traits and are associated with good fortune, which could explain the rare uptick in birth rates. However, the overall population still shrank by two million, its steepest decline since 1961, officially ceding the title of most populous country to India. This is no small concern. By 2035, China is projected to have 400 million citizens over the age of 60—nearly one-third of its total population—raising red flags over future labour shortages, pension sustainability, and economic stagnation. China's one-child policy China's one-child policy, in place from 1980 to 2015, has also left a cultural imprint that will be difficult to erase. The country has been actively reversing the policy, allowing two children from 2016 and three from 2021. While these efforts are slowly being realised, they are not keeping up with the population decline. New subsidy to aid 20 million The new subsidy, which will not be taxed or counted against other welfare benefits, is expected to benefit over 20 million families annually, Xinhua reported. It follows years of local pilot schemes offering more generous incentives, such as Hohhot's 10,000-yuan annual grants per child and Shenyang's monthly payments of 500 yuan for third children. While these schemes have shown some encouraging signs— Tianmen city, for instance, recorded a 17 per cent spike in newborns in 2024 —experts warn against overstating the impact of cash handouts alone. Professor Mao Zhuoyan of Capital University of Economics and Business told Xinhua that while subsidies are helpful in easing day-to-day expenses like formula or diapers, they are not a 'cure-all' to the full cost of raising a child in China. Cost of parenthood in China According to a 2024 report by the YuWa Population Research Institute, the average cost of raising a child from birth to college graduation in China now stands at 680,000 yuan (about ₹82 lakh or $94,557). Even raising a child to the age of 17 costs over 538,000 yuan, placing China among the most expensive countries in the world to have children. Compare this with average annual urban salaries of 125,100 yuan in affluent provinces like Jiangsu and just 58,100 yuan in hospitality sectors—according to Statista, based on annual salaries drawn in 2023—and it becomes evident why many young Chinese are reluctant to start families. Parenthood crisis: What's really deterring China's youth? Beyond finances, broader cultural and societal shifts are at play. Many young people, especially women, cite career pressures, lack of childcare support, and unaffordable housing as key deterrents to parenthood, a report by Think Global Health showed. Delayed marriages, rising infertility, and a longstanding preference for smaller families have further complicated matters. How is the Chinese govt responding to population crisis? In response, Beijing has been introducing a plethora of reforms. Some of these are: Promoting flexible work hours and work-from-home options for parents Offering preferential housing for families with multiple children Expanding childcare and preschool infrastructure Providing IVF and fertility treatments under public health insurance Mandating epidural access in large hospitals by 2027 Is the subsidy too little, too late? While the subsidy signals serious intent, experts argue it's far from a silver bullet. Yang Yiyong from the Academy of Macroeconomic Research told Xinhua that China needs affordable education, accessible child and maternity care, workplace protections for mothers, and social support structures. And time is running out. Projections of the United Nations estimate China's population could shrink to 1.3 billion by 2050, and further to 633 million by 2100, losing over 750 million people this century. Are there lessons for India here? As India assumes the role of the world's most populous nation, Beijing's policy evolution holds crucial lessons. India, too, is seeing a fertility slowdown, and the economic and social costs of parenthood are rising rapidly in urban areas. Last month, a LinkedIn post by Bengaluru-based startup founder Meenal Goel went viral, where Goel estimated the cost of raising a child in India to be between ₹38-45 lakh. Other media reports suggest these costs can even go above ₹1 crore, depending on school fees, tuition, college, lifestyle, etc. China's experiment is a sign that reversing a demographic slide is complex and expensive. Moreover, while subsidies may be helpful, a much wider structural transformation is still needed. The bottom line China's 3,600-yuan subsidy is a notable step, but unless backed by deeper social reforms, it may not be enough to convince families that parenthood is affordable or desirable in the modern Chinese economy.


Mint
10 minutes ago
- Mint
Monsoon session of Delhi Assembly from August 4: School fee regulation bill on agenda—Here's what else to expect
Lieutenant Governor VK Saxena on July 28 issued an order for commencing the Monsoon session of Delhi Assembly from 4 August, which will be the first for Rekha Gupta-led Delhi government after forming the government in February this year. The school fee regulation bill is on the agenda when it begins. 'In exercise of the power conferred upon me by Section 6(1) of the Government of National Capital Territory of Delhi Act, 1991 (Central Act No.1 of 1992), I, hereby summon the Third Session of the Eighth Legislative Assembly of the National Capital Territory of Delhi to meet at Assembly Hall, Old Secretariat, on Monday, the August 4, 2025 at 2 p.m," he stated. The session will run for five days. It will shift to digital, with completely paper-less rollout under the National e-Vidhan Application (NeVA), according to officials. For that, a three-day practical training programme for MLAs kicked off on Monday, July 21, at the Vidhan Sabha Complex. A total of 18 computer systems have been installed for the sessions, with expert trainers from the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs guiding legislators from July 21 to 23. The NeVA initiative is moving forward consistently and is anticipated to be finalised before the monsoon session starts. This will greatly improve the digital transformation of legislative operations, allowing smooth electronic access to parliamentary sessions and official records. 2. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) govt in Delhi will likely to introduce important bills and policies. One of which is Delhi School Education Transparency in Fixation and Regulation of Fees Bill, 2025, officials said. The Cabinet-approved ordinance from April 29 introduces stringent penalties for schools that arbitrarily hike fees, including the potential loss of the right to propose future fee revisions. For a first offense, schools may be fined between ₹ 1 lakh and ₹ 5 lakh, while repeat violations carry increased fines ranging from ₹ 2 lakh to Rs10 lakh. If a school fails to refund the fees within the designated timeframe, the ordinance mandates that the fine will double after 20 days, triple after 40 days, and continue to rise with every additional 20-day delay. The draft also targets individuals involved in repeated violations, barring them from holding official positions within the school management. Furthermore, school management may lose their privilege to propose fee revisions going forward. 3. 'We will highlight achievements of the government in the House and raise issues related to people's welfare,' Abhay Verma, the chief whip of the ruling party, stated. Meanwhile, Aam Admi Party (AAP) MLA Atishi mentioned the parents of school children are "angry and helpless." She blamed the BJP government for "openly" aligning with private school managements while "ignoring" their "plight". She added, 'The BJP wants to avoid questions during the Assembly session' and alleged the MLAs haven't been given time to raise questions. (With inputs from PTI and IANS)


Mint
10 minutes ago
- Mint
Philips Soars After Lifting Margin Outlook on Softer Tariff Hit
(Bloomberg) -- Royal Philips NV increased its profitability outlook as the impact of the trade war was not as severe as it feared. The Dutch medical-technology firm now expects full-year adjusted operating earnings margin of as much as 11.8%, a 50 basis points increase from its previous outlook, according to a statement Tuesday. Shares in Philips rose 14% in early trading in Amsterdam, the biggest intraday advance in a year. 'It's a combination of the strong performance plus tariffs that led to a change in guidance,' Chief Executive Officer Roy Jakobs said in an interview. The MRI and ultrasound machine maker's second-quarter sales increased 0.6% to €4.3 billion ($4.98 billion), compared with estimates for a 0.5% contraction in a Bloomberg survey. 'Overall, we see this as a positive release for Philips with improving underlying performance at the company testament to some of the turnaround actions taken,' Barclays analyst Hassan Al-Wakeel said in a note. In May, the Amsterdam-listed company lowered its profitability outlook for the year by 100 basis points, blaming the cost of dealing with tariffs and estimating a hit of as much as €300 million. It now sees an impact of as much as €200 million. On Sunday, the European Union reached a deal with the US with Brussels accepting a 15% tariff on most of its exports, dodging an imminent trade war. More than 40% of Philips' sales are in the US with a third of production inside the country. Philips is asking for tariff exemptions for the healthcare sector. 'The US is a very important market for us,' Jakobs said in an interview with Bloomberg TV, adding that the company is expanding its presence and investment there. Philips's stock was down 19% in the year before Tuesday as the company suffered a string of setbacks. A settlement last year over a 2021 recall of faulty sleep apnea devices made way for sluggish growth in China and an expected hit from the trade war. Since taking the helm at Philips in October 2022, Jakobs has cut jobs, revamped leadership and simplified operations. He is emphasizing patient safety and developing new products, with the company spending more than 9% of sales on innovation last year. Still, headwinds such as weak consumer sentiment in China and the implementation of anti-graft measures for its health care sector have dampened demand. Sales in China declined again in the second quarter, but were offset by growth in India and Latin America. Philips' comparable orders increased 6% in the second quarter, up from 2% in the previous three months. The company said Tuesday it signed an agreement with Indonesia for its Azurion image-guided therapy system. The multi-year deal is worth hundreds of millions of euros, according to a person familiar, who asked not to be identified discussing private information. The company also increased its free cash flow outlook to between €200 million and €400 million, from 'slightly positive' before. --With assistance from Lisa Pham, Sarah Jacob, Anna Edwards, Kriti Gupta and Guy Johnson. (Updates with share move in second paragraph.) More stories like this are available on