Opinion

Israel’s well-documented economic optimism

While China’s investments overseas have recently declined, China’s investments in Israel have not.

Israeli currency. Photo by Nati Shohat/Flash90.
Israeli currency. Photo by Nati Shohat/Flash90.
Yoram Ettinger
Yoram Ettinger
Yoram Ettinger is a former ambassador and head of Second Thought: A U.S.-Israel Initiative.

Straight from the Jerusalem Boardroom #233:

  1. PepsiCo concluded the acquisition of Israel’s SodaStream for $3.2 billion (Globes Business Daily, Dec. 6, 2018). The Chicago-based Thoma Bravo acquired Israel’s Impreva Cyber Security for $2.1 billion (Globes, Oct. 12).
  2. Venture-capital investment in Israel has grown systematically since 2008, reflecting the steady growth of Israel’s economy. This year, 2018, is expected to score a new record of investment in Israeli startups: $6 billion. That is compared to 2017 ($5.5 billion); 2016 ($5 billion); and 2015 ($4.7 billion). The last 10 years have produced the highest level of Israeli exits, including a $15.3 billion by Mobileye, which was acquired by Intel. The last 10 years have yielded an unprecedented potential of Israeli startups—which, unlike prior years, are not rushing into tempting exits—to evolve into substantial high-tech companies. Israel’s time-to-market and time-to-exit is substantially shorter than Europe’s, partly generated by the military experience of Israel’s entrepreneurs (Globes, Dec. 12, Oct. 30, Aug. 1). Israel’s Innovation Authority has concluded a series of agreements with global high-tech giants, such as Intel, Audi, Abbott, Unilever, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Panasonic, Philips, Nielsen, Fujitsu, Renault, England’s Reckitt Benckiser, etc.—to identify ground-breaking Israeli technologies (Globes, Nov. 29).
  3. Microsoft, Nokia, Cisco, AT&T, Ireland’s Accenture, Singapore’s Temasek Holdings, Bessemer Venture Partners, Eric Schmidt’s Innovation Endeavors, Japan’s Softbank, Walmart, Europe’s Airbus, Moody’s and Britain’s Barclays Bank invested in Israel’s Team8 Cyber Security venture-capital fund. Temasek acquired Israel’s Sygnia Cybersecurity startup, which was on Team8’s portfolio ($4.3 million), for $250 million (Globes, Oct. 24). Intel Capital led a $12 million round of private placement by Israel’s Seamless Network cyber-security startup (Globes, Nov. 15).
  4. Hewlett-Packard’s Chief Technology Officer, Shane Wall: “HP values Israel as a major platform of innovative technologies, which are targeted for investment by HP Tech Ventures (especially in the areas of digital production, artificial intelligence and cyber security). HP has been in Israel for 30 years, employing 3,000 persons.”
  5. South Korea announced its intention to acquire ($292 million) two early-warning radar systems, which are developed and manufactured by Israel’s ELTA Systems, a subsidiary of Israel’s Aerospace Industries (Reuters, Nov. 27). Israel’s Aerospace Industries has concluded an agreement with South Korea’s Hankuk Carbon for the joint development and manufacturing of unmanned aerial vehicles. The 2018 Israeli export to South Korea (around $600 million) was 36 percent higher than 2017, mostly medical, chemical and metal products. During 2018, Israel’s import from South Korea was around $900 million, mostly machinery and cars. A free-trade agreement is negotiated between Israel and South Korea (Globes, Oct. 24). According to Avi Jorisch, author of Thou Shalt Innovate: How Israeli Ingenuity Repairs the World, Israel and South Korea are natural partners, having become regional economic superpowers due to their collective brainpower, which compensates for their limited natural resources. They are relatively young, born out of war and living under constant military threat, which has induced much tenacity and innovation (The Korea Herald, Oct. 24).
  6. While China’s investments overseas have recently declined, China’s investments in Israel have not. During the last five years, the most active Chinese investors, in Israel, have been Horizons, CE, GoCapital & EOC, Radiant and Alibaba Capital. Chinese investments have accounted to 12 percent of the overall investment in Israeli startups, compared with 7.5 percent to 9 percent during 2015-17 (Globes, Oct. 30).
  7. According to the Nov. 8 issue of the London Economist intelligence Unit,“Israel begins the process of auctioning off 19 oil and natural-gas exploration blocks off the country’s Mediterranean coastline … 854 billion cubic meters of proven natural-gas reserves have been discovered, and some of them have been extracted. … Israeli firms have signed contracts to sell natural gas to Egypt and Jordan.”

Yoram Ettinger is a former ambassador and head of Second Thought: A U.S.-Israel Initiative.

The opinions and facts presented in this article are those of the author, and neither JNS nor its partners assume any responsibility for them.
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