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Italy and China sign €8bn business deals

Milan/Rome - Italy and China signed business deals worth about €8bn on Tuesday in sectors ranging from energy to engineering, deepening Beijing's commercial ties with the eurozone's No 3 economy.

China has already spent well over €5bn buying stakes in some of Italy's biggest companies this year.

At a news conference with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in Rome, Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said the deals were no more than an "antipasto" and should open the way to further accords with China in the future.

"We must bring more China to Italy and take more Italy to China," he said.

Li, who will be attending the ASEM meeting of Asian and European leaders in Milan on Thursday and Friday, said China wished to strengthen cooperation with small and medium-sized firms and would encourage more Chinese tourists to visit Italy.

With Italy's economy now back in recession for the third time since 2008 and foreign investors wary of the country's notorious red tape and unpredictable legal system, Renzi's government has been keen to woo cash-rich buyers from China.

The deals in Italy follow a series of business accords Li signed during a visit to Berlin last week.

Italian state lender CDP said it had signed an accord with China Development Bank (CDB) for cooperation projects worth up to €3bn over the first five years of the deal.

It gave no details but said the projects could be in infrastructure, direct equity investments or export financing. An Italian source said CDB would put up more than half of the total financial resources made available for joint investments.

In addition, Italian state investment fund FSI said it had signed a memorandum of understanding with China Investment Corp, a sovereign wealth fund responsible for managing part of China's foreign exchange reserves, for joint investment projects in which each would provide up to €500m.

Among other deals, aerospace group Finmeccanica announced a €400m contract to supply 50 helicopters, while electricity group Enel signed a memorandum of understanding with Bank of China potentially making available up to €1bn of financing over the next five years.

As well as being a big buyer of Italian government bonds, China's central bank has made a series of significant investments in blue- chip Italian companies this year. They include stakes of about 2% in Italy's biggest carmaker Fiat, top domestic telecoms operator Telecom Italia and world No 1 cable maker Prysmian.

In March, the central bank bought similar stakes in leading oil and gas operator Eni - an investment worth €1.3bn - and in utility Enel.

In addition, China's State Grid bought a 35% stake in energy grid holding company CDP Reti for €2.1bn and Shanghai Electric Group took a 40% stake in power engineering company Ansaldo Energia from Italian state fund FSI in a deal worth €400m.

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