China Offers Taiwan Crisis Help, More Financial Ties
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aFZOzHvMdnjY&refer=home

Dec. 20 (Bloomberg) -- China offered to help Taiwan cope with the
deepening global financial crisis and proposed broader financial links
at a forum that will set the stage for further government-level talks
after a nine-year suspension.

China is ready to help Taiwan and the two sides should discuss a
financial supervisory mechanism for banks, securities and insurance
firms as well as a currency-clearance mechanism, Jia Qinglin, a
Politburo member, said at a forum in Shanghai.

Officials of Taiwan’s ruling Kuomintang and their Chinese counterparts
are meeting to hammer out a consensus on broadening financial ties as
their economies face a worsening global recession. Taiwanese
businessmen have already invested an estimated $150 billion in China
and have been clamoring for Taiwan financial companies to be permitted
to offer services to ease access to financing and capital.

“An agreement could enable us to upgrade our four securities
representative offices in China to branches,” said, Lin Shau-dai,
chairman of Polaris Securities Co., Taiwan’s largest online brokerage.
“It might allow us to enter China’s futures and asset management
businesses, which are still banned for the moment.”

Taiwanese banks and securities firms can only operate representative
offices, which aren’t permitted to offer any financial services. A
consensus reached at the two-day meeting will likely form the basis
for the governments of both sides to sign a memorandum of
understanding on financial ties in the first half of next year.

Direct Investment

“Signing an MOU will mean we can directly invest in mainland banks
without needing to do so via a third location,” said Daniel Tsai,
chairman of Taiwan’s second-largest financial services company Fubon
Financial Holding Co. “We will actively seek acquisition targets in
China.”

Fubon Bank (Hong Kong) Ltd., Fubon’s Hong Kong unit, rose the most in
seven weeks yesterday as the party officials met in Shanghai. Fubon
shares advanced 20 percent, the most since Nov. 3, to close at HK
$2.44, while the benchmark Hang Seng index fell 2.4 percent.

In June, Fubon Bank agreed to buy a 20 percent stake in Xiamen City
Commercial Bank for 230 million yuan ($34 million). It was the first
such purchase since the island started letting lenders buy into
mainland banks through third-country subsidiaries in March.

Thawing Relations

The forum comes amid a thaw in ties after Taiwan and China on Dec. 15
ended a six decade-ban on direct transport and postal links. The
resumption of links may boost the island’s $380 billion economy, which
is headed for its first recession in seven years.

Ties between Taipei and Beijing improved significantly since the KMT’s
Ma Ying-jeou took office in May and dropped the pro-independence
stance of his predecessor Chen Shui-bian.

“We should jointly cooperate in seeking a practical model for dealing
with the financial tsunami,” KMT chairman Wu Poh- hsiung told the
forum. “We have a concrete plan to support Taiwanese businessmen, who
are facing increasing difficulties in access to financing.”

Both sides should also give access to participation in public
construction projects to bring in capital and experience in management
and technology, Wu said.

Complementary Ties

“We can now expect Taiwan and China to complement each other,” said
Jason Chang, chairman of Taiwan-listed Advanced Semiconductor
Engineering Inc., the world’s largest chip packaging and testing
company. “We can unify China’s huge funds and market and Taiwan’s
experience in liberalization and management talents.”

The forum is the fourth annual summit since Chinese President and
Communist Party leader Hu Jintao in 2005 met former Kuomintang
Chairman Lien Chan, ending more than 60 years of hostility between the
two political parties.

The KMT’s Wu and Honorary Chairman Lien are leading a delegation of
about 150 KMT officials, business executives and academics.

Beijing and Taipei held their first official talks since 1999 in June,
when they reached a consensus on opening direct weekend charter
flights and allowing mainland tourists to the island. Resumption of
exchanges had been slow as both sides of the Taiwan Strait regarded
each other with suspicion, even as almost 1 million Taiwanese already
live and work in China.

Direct links had been banned since the end of a civil war in 1949,
when Mao Zedong’s victorious communist forces took control of China’s
government and drove Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist army to Taiwan. The
Chinese government still regards Taiwan part of its territory and aims
hundreds of missiles at the island to prevent it from declaring
independence. (*)

(*) My comment: This is unaccurate. Both the Republic of China
(R.O.C.) a.k.a. Taiwan, and the People´s Republic of China (P.R.C.),
have in their constitution that there is just one China. This sort of
journalists should respect, at least, what Taiwanese have had since
the begining in their constitution and what they have decided in a
referendum celebrated in 2008. ROC has missiles trageting mainland and
PRC targetting Taiwan since 1949, not just one side as this biased
journalist tries to make readers to believe.

This style of journalism tries to break ties between the two areas of
China. Fortunately, current politicians look for cooperation instead
of politic differences.

On Dec 17, 3:19 pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
> More ...
>
> Part 1:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4UOcgPzZcY
>
> Part 2:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4YPRHGEsNw
>
> On Dec 15, 3:32 pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Pandas ready for Taiwanhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTp6SuZFbcY
>
> > Direct cross-strait flightshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdH5H52N16I
>
> > I hope you like it.
>
> > Peace and best wishes.
>
> > Xi
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