Foreign Direct Investment and North America Europe

: Their share in global foreign direct investment reached a record of 36 percent, up from 12 percent in 2007, the year prior to the financial crisis, according to Xinhua China. The report noted investments by TNCs in developed countries were largely flat at 792 billion U.S. dollars, with a modest rise in flows from North America and Europe more than offset by a 16 percent decline in Japanese investment abroad. The report said in 2014, transnational corporations from developing economies alone invested almost half a trillion U.S. dollars abroad -- a 30 percent increase from the previous year. More than half of investments from TNCs based in developing economies were in equity, while as much as four-fifths of FDI outflows from developed country TNCs were in the form of reinvested earnings -- the result of record amounts of cash reserves in their foreign affiliates. However, TNCs remain guarded due to the fragility in some emerging markets, exchange rate volatility and increased geopolitical tensions, the report added. UNCTAD estimates that TNC investment appetite will improve, encouraged by better economic prospects, especially in the United States, proactive monetary policy in the euro zone and large cash holdings of companies. (news.financializer.com). As reported in the news.

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