There have already been 82 Chinese outbound mergers and acquisitions deals announced this year, amounting to $73 billion in value, according to Dealogic. That's up from 55 deals worth $6.2 billion in the same period last year.
Last year was a record-breaker for Chinese outbound deals, with 607 deals valued at $112.5 billion in total. Just over one month in to 2015, and China is more than half way towards breaking that total.
So what's going on?
One interpretation is that Chinese companies are simply hungry for growth as that country's economy slows, and they're feeding themselves by buying other companies.
"With the slowdown of the economy, Chinese corporates are increasingly looking to inorganic avenues to supplement their growth," Vikas Seth, head of emerging markets in the investment banking and capital markets department at Credit Suisse, told Business Insider.
But there's more to it than just growth. These are cross-border M&A deals and they're also about market access.
"Some of the primary motivations for cross-border acquisitions are access to new markets, brands, technologies, R&D capabilities and, in some cases, to products and supply chains that can be sold into a buyer's distribution networks within China," Seth said.
"We think this pace will be sustained since China is going through a remarkable transformation of its economy," he added.
Acquirers include state-owned enterprises, sovereign wealth funds, private corporations, and private equity funds.
In the case the deal for GE's appliance unit, Haier is getting both market access and access to GE's brand. With the Syngenta deal, ChemChina is getting technology and crucial research and development too.
In purchasing Legendary Entertainment, Dalian Wanda, which also owns movie theater chains in China, will get control over the content they're producing.
Challenges
Like any deal spree, this boom is good for Wall Street.
Last year investment bankers earned $558 million in revenue from Chinese outbound M&A deals, according to Dealogic. This year, that number is at $121 million to date.
But there are, of course, a number of challenge these deals will face especially in the US.
Andy Kiersz/Business InsiderThe 82 Chinese outbound deals announced so far in 2016 are worth more than half of 2015's total Chinese outbound deal value.
"I would be very surprised if CFIUS did not have an interest in taking a look at this deal," said Anne Salladin of law firm Stroock & Stroock, referring to the Chicago Stock Exchange deal.
There could also be cultural challenges when it comes to integrating Western-managed companies into Chinese businesses. Not to mention potential challenges valuing companies, given the market volatility we've seen recently.
Chinese companies need to have the full backing of the Chinese government in order to close foreign deals.
They need approval in order to get enough foreign exchange to pay for the acquisitions, something the government monitors closely. Also, many of the companies chasing after foreign deals are actually state-owned enterprises.
Given the recent volume of deals, however, it would appear that the Chinese government is supportive of the foreign buying spree. And that suggests there could be a lot more deal activity on the horizon.
It's a smart trick for China. They buy up increasing number of companies that our ex hippy CEOs are too incompetent or disinterested to run with the result the profits go to China. In 20 years every Chinaman will be able to retire off the money skimmed from our money circulation.
They buy up increasing number of companies that our ex hippy CEOs are too incompetent or disinterested to run with the result the profits go to China. In 20 years every Chinaman will be able to retire off the money skimmed from our money circulation.
Money is just a paper or computer bits. Real wealth is in real material things, like factories, know-how, land and other real estate assets.
Chicoms are well, Chinese Commies. It means materialists who believe that real wealth are based on material goods and production, not on financial hocus pocus.