Survey shows record low U.S. business optimism regarding China’s outlook

Survey shows record low U.S. business optimism regarding China’s outlook

SHANGHAI,⁣ Sept 19 ⁣(Reuters) ‌- Political ⁤tensions and a slowing economy ⁣are sapping the confidence of‍ U.S. businesses⁢ operating in China, with the number of ‍companies optimistic about their five-year outlook falling⁢ to a record ⁤low,​ a⁤ survey ‌published on Tuesday‍ showed.

Even after the​ ending of COVID curbs, which weighed heavily on revenues and sentiment in 2022, the ‍percentage of surveyed U.S. firms optimistic about the five-year China business outlook‌ fell to 52%, according to the annual survey published by the American Chamber of Commerce‍ (AmCham) in Shanghai.

This was the lowest ⁤level of‌ optimism reported since the AmCham Shanghai Annual China‌ Business Report was first‍ introduced in 1999.

“Frankly, if there ‌was one thing⁣ that surprised me about the survey this year ​it was ‌that number,” said AmCham ‌Shanghai Chairman,‌ Sean Stein. “By the ⁢time we ‌did ⁤this year’s​ survey a lot of the illusions had fallen away that we would see a sustained rebound in economic growth (post-COVID).”

Tensions between ‍major world powers remained a concern ⁤for many companies, ⁤with U.S.-China tensions cited​ as ​a top business challenge by⁣ 60% of the survey’s⁣ 325 respondents, equal⁣ to the⁤ number who pointed to China’s economic slowdown ​as‌ a⁣ significant challenge.

Unease about ‍the transparency of China’s regulatory environment also rose, with one third reporting that policies and regulations ​towards foreign companies had ‌worsened in the‌ past year, ⁢although many respondents pointed‌ to⁣ U.S. government policy rather than China’s when asked⁣ about pressure to ⁤decouple.

The European Union Chamber of Commerce’s European⁤ Business in China ⁣position paper, ⁣released later on Tuesday, outlined how European companies ‌are already struggling with ‍competing ‍requests‍ from Chinese and Western customers to produce goods containing no Chinese or U.S.-made components or software.

Companies have been at the centre ⁢of deteriorating relations between the two countries for several years. China has criticised U.S. efforts ‌to block China’s access to advanced technology ‍and U.S. firms have expressed concern about⁤ fines, raids and​ other actions that ‌make doing‌ business in China risky.

Last month, U.S.⁢ Commerce Secretary ⁢Gina Raimondo said during a ⁤visit to China that U.S. companies ⁣have complained ⁣to her that China ⁤has ⁣become “uninvestible”.

Rising political and trade tensions were also cited as ⁢the top risk to‍ China’s ​future economic growth in the AmCham report, with improved U.S.-China relations the number one factor respondents said would⁤ improve‌ their industry’s prospects in China.

AmCham’s Stein said that the survey ⁤had been⁤ conducted‌ prior to Raimondo’s visit and, since then,‍ he believed companies had begun to reconsider whether⁤ they had been “too pessimistic that there wasn’t any way to get out of⁤ a constant downward slide (in U.S.-China relations)”.

A larger percentage of firms – 40%, up from 34% ⁤last year – are currently redirecting or ⁤looking to redirect investment that had been earmarked for China,…

Post ⁤from www.reuters.com

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