Foreign Invested
Enterprises Registration Procedures
The procedures described below apply
to registration of Wholly Foreign Owned Enterprises,
Sino-Foreign Equity Joint Ventures, Sino-Foreign Cooperative
Joint Ventures.
The establishment of foreign investment
enterprises consists of three phases: (1) approval
of the project proposal, feasibility study report,
Joint Venture Contract and Articles of Association;
(2) registration with the AIC; and (3) post-establishment
procedures.
APPROVAL PHASE
All foreign investment projects are
subject to approval by government authorities. The
major legal documents involved in this phase are the
project proposal, feasibility study report Joint Venture
Contract and Articles of Association. Relevant Chinese
laws provide that a joint venture agreement should
also be executed and submitted to the Chinese government
authorities. However, as a practical matter, the joint
venture agreement has been abolished.
For joint venture projects relating
to infrastructure construction, the project proposal
and feasibility study should be submitted to the State
Development Planning Committee or its local counterparts
for approval. For joint venture projects relating
to technology upgrade of exiting enterprises, the
project proposal and .feasibility study should be
submitted to the State Economic and Trade Commission
or its local counterparts for approval.
The project proposal and feasibility
study for other joint venture projects and feasibility
study for WFOE's should be submitted to MOFTEC, other
government agencies or their local counterparts for
approval. The Joint Venture Contract and Articles
of Association for all foreign investment projects
should be submitted to MOFTEC or its authorized agencies
for approval.
(1) Project Proposal
Project proposals are only required
for joint venture projects. WFOE's are not required
to submit project proposals. The project proposal
should be prepared by the Chinese party. Project proposals
are usually compiled after the joint venture parties
have had a preliminary exchange of their intentions
for setting up a joint venture and have achieved a
basic agreement. A project proposal is mainly to discuss,
from the macro perspective, the necessity and possibility
for the joint venture project. In ordinary cases,
a project proposal should be submitted to the approval
authority after the foreign party or parties have
been selected. However, if a project is deemed very
advantageous and profitable, in order to select better
foreign investors, a project proposal] may be submitted
first to the approval authority before a foreign party
is selected.
Chinese law requires that the following
contents should be included in the project proposal
which is subject to the approval of the planning authority:
(i) General information regarding
the Chinese party - Such information should include
the name of the Chinese party, a general introduction
to its operations, legal address, the legal representative's
name and position, the authority in charge of the
Chinese party;
(ii) The joint venture purpose - The
joint venture purpose should focus on the necessity
and feasibility of earning foreign exchange and technology
import.
(iii) The joint venture party - The
information regarding the joint venture party includes
the name of the foreign party, its country of incorporation,
legal address, the name, position and nationality
of the legal representative of the foreign at venture
party.
(iv) The business scope and business
volume - The business scope and business volume should
focus on the necessity of the project, the need for
the products in domestic and foreign markets and their
manufacturing information, and the sales -region of
the products of the joint venture.
(v) Estimate of Investment - The investment
for a project consists of the fixed assets and the
working capital for the project.
(vi) Investment Methods and Sources
of Capital - The capital ratio of the joint venture
parties and the capital contribution methods should
be specified in a project proposal application.
(vii) Manufacturing Technology and
Major Equipment - The project proposal should specify
information regarding the equipment and technology
to be used by the joint venture. Important technological
economic data should also be set forth in the project
proposal.
(viii) The Amount of Requisite Major
Raw Materials, Water, Electricity, Gas and Transportation
and Their Sources.
(ix) The Number of Personnel and Methods
of Recruitment.
(x) Economic Benefits and Foreign
Exchange Arrangements.
In addition to the above information,
a project proposal should also have the following
attachments:
(i) Letter of Intent of the Joint
Venture Parties;
(ii) The result of the investigation
of creditworthiness of the foreign party;
(iii) Preliminary survey and forecast
report of the domestic and international market needs,
or the opinions of the relevant responsible authorities
for sales of the products;
(iv) Letter of Intent of the relevant
authorities for major raw materials, energy and transportation;
and
(v) Letter of Intent of the relevant
authorities regarding arrangement of investment funds.
The above requirements are formulated
based on the assumption that a foreign party has been
selected. If no foreign party has been selected, the
Chinese party may also submit a project proposal for
approval. The relevant information concerning foreign
parties may be submitted to the approval authority
after the foreign party is selected. If the planning
authority does not reply within one month after it
receives the investigation results of the creditworthiness
of foreign parties, the approval may be deemed to
be tacit. Therefore, the Chinese parties may start
to work on the feasibility study of the project.
For foreign investment projects relating
to the technology upgrade of existing state-owned
companies, the State Economic and Trade Commission
requires that the following information must be included
in the project proposal:
(i) The purpose, necessity and basis
for the project;
(ii) The plan of products and the
plan of assimilating imported technology, preliminary
assessment of the market demand and preliminary opinions
on the technology upgrade scales;
(iii) Information of resources, construction
conditions and preliminary analysis of the potential
foreign party;
(iv) Estimate of total investment
and financing methods;
(v) Major content of the technology
upgrade and preliminary arrangement of schedules;
and
(vi) Preliminary estimate of economic
benefits and social benefits.
If the project is less than US$30,000,000,
the content of the project proposal may be simplified.
However, in any event, the following information should
be included in a project proposal:
(i) A basic introduction of the Chinese
party and the reasons for the upgrade;
(ii) Major contents of the technology
upgrade and technology import;
(iii) Expected technological
and economic results as a result of the technology
upgrade; and
(iv) Estimate of total investment
and source of financing.
(2) Feasibility Study Report
After the project proposal is approved,
the Chinese and foreign parties may carry out feasibility
study research. Wholly foreign owned enterprise projects
do not need to prepare project proposals. The foreign
investors may directly prepare a feasibility study
report.
A feasibility study report should
investigate and appraise major factors of a project.
It should cover economic issues technology, financial
issues, management structure, cooperation conditions
and other aspects in relation to the foreign investment
company to be established.
Chinese laws contain mandatory clauses
that must be included in a feasibility study report.
For a joint venture project subject to approval by
the planning commission (the feasibility study report
for a WOFE should be submitted to MOFTEC or its authorized
government agencies together with the Articles of
Association and other documents), the following provisions
must be covered in the feasibility study report:
(a) The basic information of the project;
The basic information of a project
consists of the following:
(i) The name, legal address, purpose,
business scope and business volume of the foreign
investment company;
(ii) The name, incorporation location
and legal address of each joint venture party; the
name, position and nationality of the legal representative
of each joint venture party; and the authority in
charge of the Chinese party;
(iii) The total amount of investment,
registered capital of the joint venture company (including
the amount of self-owned funds to be contributed by
each investor, the capital ratio, capital contribution
method and schedule for capital contribution);
(iv) The joint venture term, the profit
distribution method and the ratio of loss sharing;
(v) Approval document for the project
proposal;
(vi) The names of the people responsible
for preparing the feasibility study report; and
(vii) General introduction, conclusion,
issues and suggestions of the feasibility study report.
(b) The arrangement of manufacture
of products and its basis;
A feasibility study report should set out the demand
in both domestic and international markets, the methods
of market survey, and the current manufacturing ability
of the existing plants and plants in construction
China and overseas.
(c) The supply arrangement of raw
materials, energy and transportation and the basis
for such arrangement;
(d) Site selection and its basis;
(e) Selection of equipment, technology
and manufacturing process;
(f) Arrangement of production;
A feasibility study report should
address the number of employee sources of employees
and the operational management of the joint venture
company;
(g) Prevention of environmental pollution,
labour safety, hygiene facilities and the basis for
such;
(h) Construction methods, construction
schedule and the basis for such;
(i) Capital financing and its basis;
(j) Foreign exchange arrangement and
its basis;
(k) Comprehensive analysis;
Comprehensive analysis comprises economic,
technological, financial and legal analyses.
(l) Major attachments
-(i) The business license of each
joint venture party;
-(ii) Identification documents of
the legal representative of each joint venture party;
-(iii) The Balance Sheet and Profit
and Loss Statement for each joint venture party;
-(iv) Survey results of the demand
in domestic and international markets, a forecast
report and the export ratio of the products to be
manufactured by the joint venture company;
-(v ) The opinion letters issued by
relevant authorities for arrangements of raw materials,
auxiliary materials, components, energy and transportation;
-(vi) Opinion of the relevant authorities
relating to equipment delivery;
-(vii) Opinions of the relevant authorities
relating to using the joint venture products to replace
imported products;
-(viii) Opinions of the relevant authorities
relating to financing;
-(ix) Opinion of the relevant authorities
relating to site selection;
-(x) Opinion of the relevant authorities
relating to environmental protection, fire control,
labour safety, hygiene facilities and earthquake;
-(xi) Opinion of the relevant authorities
relating to foreign exchange income and expenditure;
and
-(xii) Opinion of the relevant authorities
on evaluation or preliminary review of the project.
The SDPC requires that except in special
circumstances, a decision should be made on whether
or not to grant approval for a feasibility s report
within 90 days after the SDPC receives all the documents
meeting the statutory requirements. For projects of
over one US$100,000,000, the SDPC should forward the
documents to the State Council for approval within
the above time limit. If the submitted documents do
not meet the statutory requirements or the attachments
are not complete, the SDPC may request the applicant
to submit additional documents. Otherwise, the SDPC
may reject the application by returning all submitted
documents. For the local development planning commission,
the approval time limit is also 90 days.
The State Economic and Trade Commission
(SETC) requires that a feasibility study report should
be comprised of the following information:
(1) Introduction to the project;
(2) Basic information regarding the
Chinese party;
(3) Estimate of the demand in both
domestic and foreign market, the product level and
production scale, and the prospect of export;
(4) Supply of fuel, energy, raw materials,
components and public facilities;
(5) Several plans as to selection
of technology and equipment;
(6) Selection of the best technology
upgrade plan;
(7) Prevention of environmental pollution;
(8) Plans of production and personnel
training;
(9) Schedule of the project;
(10) Investment estimate, financing,
including repayment methods and exchange risk estimate;
(11) Economic and social benefit evaluation
and analysis; and
(12) Agreements as to outside conditions
for the project and other written documents.
The SETC fails to expressly provide
for the specific time limit for approval of feasibility
study reports. However, because the SETC is responsible
for approval of technology upgrade projects and the
project proposal and feasibility study report are
prepared by the Chinese parties, the Chinese parties
may use their relationships with the SETC or its local
counterparts to shorten the approval period.
(3) Joint Venture Contract and Articles of
Association
The joint venture contracts and Articles
of Association are usually approved by MOFTEC. MOFTEC
has issued statutory provisions regulating the examination
and approval of joint venture contracts and Articles
of Association. MOFTEC and its local counterparts
should follow the following principles when examining
and reviewing a foreign investment project:
(i) Whether or not the Joint Venture
Contracts and Articles of Association comply with
Chinese law;
(ii) Whether or not the Joint Venture
Contracts and Articles of Association comply with
the feasibility study reports and relevant approval
documents; and
(iii) Whether or not the principles
of equality and mutual benefit are adhered to.
According to regulations, the MOFTEC
and its local counterparts should examine the following
key points of a foreign investment project:
(i) The validity of the Joint Venture
Contract and Articles of Association;
In particular, the approval authority
must review whether or not the Joint Venture Contract
and Articles of Association include signature date
and location, whether the signatories of the Joint
Venture Contract and Articles of Association are the
legal representatives of the contracting parties or
authorized agents of the legal representatives.
(ii) Whether or not the Joint Venture
Contract and Articles of Association contain all required
provisions $ whether or not the documents submitted
are complete;
(iii) Whether or not the Joint Venture
Contract and Articles of Association involve any governmental
activities and provisions binding a third party;
(iv) Whether or not the approval procedures
have been completed for projects subject to special
government approvals;
In China, projects subject to special
government approval consist of (a) foreign investment
projects in restricted industries, (b) projects requiring
import of machinery and equipment, the import of which
is restricted by the government, and (c) the export
of the finished products which require export permits.
(v) Whether or not the business scope
is clear and specific; whether or not the wording
is accurate and standard;
(vi) The capital contribution ratio,
the ratio between the total amount of investment and
the registered capital, capital contribution methods
and capital contribution schedule;
(vii) Whether or not the technology
transfer complies with the Administrative Regulations
on Technology Import Contracts and the feasibility
study report;
(viii) Whether the Joint Venture Contract
and Articles of Association contain clear and specific
provisions concerning the purchase of equipment and
raw materials, the export and domestic sales ratio
of the finished products, the methods of sales, the
pricing principles and obligations;
(ix) Whether the foreign exchange
balance method is feasible;
(x) The salaries and benefits of the
Chinese and foreign employees;
(xi) The composition and authorities
of the Board of Directors, the procedures to convene
Board meetings, the operational and management organizations;
(xii) Dispute resolution and penalty
for a breach of contract;
(xiii) Termination, dissolution of
the FIE; disposal of assets upon liquidation; and
(xiv) Whether the Joint Venture Contract
and Articles of Association and their attachments
are standard and comply with the requirements under
Chinese law.
If MOFTEC or its local counterparts
approve a foreign investment project, an approval
letter will be issued. The approval letter usually
consists of the following information:
(i) The names of the FIE and the parties
to the FIE;
(ii) Business scope and production
scale of the FIE;
(iii) Total amount of investment,
the amount of the registered capital, the capital
contribution ratio and capital contribution methods,
the profit distribution principles (applicable only
to CJV's);
(iv) Operation period;
(v) Confirmation of the list of equipment
to be imported; and
(vi) Other issues that the approval
authority needs to address.
The Chinese version of the documents
submitted for government approval should prevail over
other language versions. The investors should be responsible
for the consistency of the various versions in different
languages. In practice, many foreign investors negotiate
with the Chinese parties over which version should
be the prevailing version. From the perspective of
the approval authority, no matter what the contract
provides, the Chinese version should be the prevailing
version.
Technology transfer agreements and
contracted operation agreements should be submitted
to the approval authority for approval either as separate
documents or as attachments to the Joint Venture Contract.
Loan agreements, equipment purchase agreements that
involve no technology transfer, factory lease agreements,
land use agreements and land grant contracts do not
need to be submitted to the approval authority for
approval.
The time limit for approval of Joint
Venture Contracts and Articles of Association varies
for different types of FIE's.
(1) For an EJV, the law requires that
the approval authority should decide whether or not
to grant approval within 3 days after receiving all
documents. If the approval authority determines that
the submitted documents do not meet the requirements,
the approval authority should require the applying
parties to revise the documents within a specific
time limit. In the event that the applicant fails
to revise the application documents, the approval
authority should not grant any approval.
(2) For a CJV, the approval authority
should decide whether or not to grant approval within
45 days after the approval authority receives all
documents that meet the requirements.
(3) For a WOFE, the approval authority
should decide on whether or not to grant an approval
within 90 days after the approval authority receives
all documents that meet the requirements.
(4) For a FICLBS, MOFTEC should decide
whether or not to grant approval within 45 days after
MOFTEC receives all the application documents that
comply with requirements. |