China's FDI falls one percent in May from a year ago to $8.89 billion

13 Jun, 2016

China's foreign direct investment (FDI) fell 1 percent in May from a year earlier to 56.77 billion yuan, or $8.89 billion, the Commerce Ministry said on Sunday. This is the first year-on-year decline since December, when FDI dropped 5.8 percent from the year ago month.
FDI rose 3.8 percent in January-May from a year earlier to 343.55 billion yuan, or $54.19 billion, the ministry said in a statement.
Earlier data showed FDI gained 6 percent in April from a year earlier, following a rise of 7.8 percent in March.
The ministry has started releasing yuan-denominated FDI since early 2015, along with equivalent dollar figures based on its own conversion.
Foreign investment in the services sector rose 7 percent in January-May to 241.8 billion yuan, or $38.2 billion, accounting for 70.4 percent of all FDI, said the ministry, with investment in high-tech services jumping 94.7 percent year-on-year.
Investment in the manufacturing sector fell 3.2 percent in January-May to 98.9 billion yuan, or $15.5 billion, making up 28.8 percent of the total FDI, the ministry said.
FDI from the United States soared 140.2 percent in January-May from a year earlier while investment from Britain rose 110 percent, the ministry said.

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