Is China’s risk tolerance reaching its limit with pause of African mine deal?
Regulators ‘sending a signal’ with scrutiny of potential acquisition that includes important mining assets in conflict-prone regions

Chinese regulators balked at Zijin Mining’s planned US$4 billion acquisition of Canadian company Allied Gold, placing it on hold to scrutinise the potential risks.
Allied Gold’s most important mining assets are in Africa, with the biggest being the Sadiola mine in Mali, a country which is under increasing attacks from jihadist insurgents.
The company’s other assets, in Ethiopia and Ivory Coast, are relatively safer but nevertheless are located in regions that are broadly prone to conflict and other political risks.
China’s decision to suspend the acquisition of Allied Gold signals a growing wariness in Beijing about the rising risks and security costs of its overseas investments, according to observers.