Chinese dragon losing its shine for foreign firms

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Chinese dragon losing
Chinese dragon losing
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The once irresistible allure of the Chinese market to foreign multinationals is losing some of its lustre as slowing growth in the world’s second-largest economy hits their sales.

The latest figures from firms reporting during the current results season in Europe, the United States and Japan paint a picture of overseas firms facing a worsening of operating conditions in China.

Volkswagen, which has invested heavily in China and has just displaced Toyota as the world’s leading car manufacturer, saw sales in the country — which it describes as its “second home market” — fall 3.9 per cent in the first half, its first drop in a decade.

“We are keeping a very close watch on global macroeconomic trends,” chief executive Martin Winterkorn said in a statement, “especially where there are uncertainties such as in the Chinese, Brazilian and Russian markets”.

The appeal of nearly 1.4 billion consumers and an economy regularly growing in double digits has brought more than $1.5 trillion of foreign investment to China over the last three decades.

But the economic expansion is slowing — gross domestic product grew 7.0 per cent year-on-year in April-June, matching the worst quarterly result since the first three months of 2009 during the global financial crisis.

Some investors have long seen China as a high risk destination. Rising costs for labour and more competitive markets as domestic brands gain stature have troubled foreign companies in recent years, as well as a series of anti-monopoly probes which appeared to target overseas firms.

“The industrial competitiveness of Chinese enterprises has improved, making it harder for foreign companies to compete,” Li Daxiao, an analyst at Yingda Securities, told AFP. Such challenges have been compounded by the country’s slowing economy.

In the United States, industrial giant UTC, the maker of Otis lifts, revised down its earnings forecast for 2015 partly on the back of what it described as “a slowing China”.

As well as lifts, the firm makes heating and cooling systems for buildings, leaving it exposed to a broad slowdown in the real estate sector, which its chief executive Gregory Hayes described as “worse than we had expected”.

Retail sales are still growing in China — they were up 10.6 per cent year-on-year in June, according to the government — but some foreign firms are struggling to maintain their slice of the cake.

Apple’s iPhone sales surged 85 per cent in Greater China — which includes Hong Kong and Taiwan — with revenue from the region more than doubling to $13 billion for the latest quarter ended June 27, according to the company.

But independent analysts Canalys said this week it had been pushed into third place in the quarter by local manufacturers Xiaomi and Huawei, which produce cheaper products, while South Korea’s Samsung was relegated to fourth.

Sales of luxury watches and spirits have already been battered by an extended austerity and anti-corruption campaign under President Xi Jinping.

International financial markets have been spooked by a recent rout on China’s stock market, which continues to be volatile despite direct intervention by Beijing.

Analysts say that the impact on the real economy has been limited so far, despite reports the auto and property sectors have both taken a hit.

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