A Brief Analysis Of The Interests Involved In The Surge In Overseas Mergers And Acquisitions In The Valve Industry
Overseas mergers and acquisitions can be a delicious and sweet "big pie" for the Lined Valve industry, or they can turn into a beautiful trap of fragrant temptation. Since February, the overseas merger and acquisition boom with gate valves as the hot valve target has attracted widespread attention in the valve industry. "Overseas mergers and acquisitions" has changed from an unfamiliar word to a well-known professional term in the industry. Is this an opportunity challenge for my country's valve industry, or a major reshuffle in China?
It is both happy and sad, I don't know whether it is happy or sad. Overseas mergers and acquisitions are multinational companies that buy certain shares or entire assets of companies in another country's market through certain channels, direct investment or indirect investment in order to achieve certain business goals. It can be said to be a kind of cross-border commercial trade. On the one hand, the international market for my country's valves has been opened, and the valves for product sales have been opened. Investments from other countries in my country's industry-specific enterprises have also solved the problem of capital shortages in my country's small and medium-sized enterprises to a certain extent. From national construction to overseas, from domestic hot sales to export to international markets, from the export of general products to the research and development of new products, the valve industry presents a thriving situation. There are both advantages and disadvantages. The disadvantage is that it increases the competitiveness of both domestic and foreign countries. After all, foreign advanced technology far exceeds that of my country. In addition, my country's valve industry is a labor-intensive industry. The entry of foreign companies may make the domestic valve market worse. To be honest, there is still a certain gap between my country's valve standards and international standards. Some products with high technical requirements cannot be produced independently at present.
Whether my country's valves can resist the technological attack of overseas mergers and acquisitions, withstand the commercial attack of overseas mergers and acquisitions, and whether there will be a scene of carp leaping over the dragon gate, we will wait and see.