High-end products, infrastructure are targeted sectors, diplomat says
China's investment in the United Kingdom will continue its "explosive" growth, with high-end manufacturing and infrastructure leading the way, a senior diplomat predicted.
"The UK is the most open economy, and also the most market-oriented," in Europe, said Zhou Xiaoming, minister counselor of the Chinese embassy in the UK.
Chinese companies have been answering the call from some members of the European Union for capital.
In 2011, the UK was the third-largest EU destination for Chinese investment, following Luxembourg and France, according to the Ministry of Commerce.
China's overseas direct investment in the UK in 2011 was $2.5 billion, it said.
But Zhou said the real figure was far more as Chinese overall investment in the UK experienced "explosive" growth.
"It is estimated that the Chinese capital that flew into the country in 2011 reached $6.5 billion," said Zhou.
And the momentum will probably be sustained in the coming years, he said.
The past year also saw some key mergers and acquisitions.
In May, Shanghai-based food and beverage group Bright Food agreed to pay $1.7 billion, including debt, for a 60 percent stake in UK cereal maker Weetabix.
Reports in December said China Gas Holdings agreed to buy London-listed Fortune Oil's gas business in China for $400 million.
"Chinese capital mainly went to the service, energy, food and mining industries," said Zhou.
And "high-end manufacturing and infrastructure will be hot spots" for Chinese companies, he added.
Executives of China Investment Corp, a $410 billion sovereign wealth fund, have repeatedly said that the company will seek infrastructure deals in the UK.
Developer razes historic Guangzhou structures