China Daily (Hong Kong)

Trade tensions put businesses on edge

Loss of confidence could undermine cross-border activity, executives say

- By LIU YINMENG in Los Angeles teresaliu@chinadaily­usa.com

US businessma­n Peter Shiao had worked hard with his Chinese capital partners to create an investment fund, but as they prepared to announce it this year, China-US trade tensions escalated, forcing them to make an abrupt change of plans.

“We were planning on doing something very significan­t, with a positive impact for the region, that would have been great for US employment. That’s been put on hold,” Shiao, a Los Angeles entreprene­ur, investor and producer who founded Orb Media Group, among several other China-US-based companies.

With the first round of US tariffs on $34 billion in Chinese goods taking effect on Friday at 12:01 pm, China time, some business owners in Los Angeles said a trade war between the United States and China will erode business confidence and add uncertaint­y to cross-border economic activity.

“It’s going to hurt California in general, but it is going to hurt Los Angeles, in my opinion, more than any other region in the United States because of our close dependency on internatio­nal trade,” Stephen Cheung, president of World Trade Center Los Angeles, said in a recent interview.

According to a 2018 report by the organizati­on, there are an estimated 10,378 foreignown­ed companies in Southern California, representi­ng approximat­ely 1.2 percent of all businesses in the region.

Of those companies, 467 are Chinese-owned, and responsibl­e for creating 15,968 jobs and paying $990 million in wages.

Massive market

Cheung said that because China is such a massive consumer market that when it adds tariffs on US goods, US exporters will have more difficulty selling their products in China.

When prices on US exports go up, consumers are the ones that will end up shoulderin­g the costs.

“The shipping companies are not going to absorb the costs. The manufactur­ers are not going to absorb the costs.

Voices across America

They are going to pass it on to the consumers,” Cheung said.

Brandy Kang, president and CEO of Coolpad Americas, a Chinese telecommun­ications equipment company, said a trade war would bring uncertaint­y to his company’s operations.

Coolpad has been in the US since 2011 and employs around 80 people. Kang said 80 percent of his workers are US citizens and that a continued trade standoff could affect local employment.

“This is a lose-lose situation,” Kang said.

Ye Wei is the executive director and president of COMAC America Corp, a subsidiary of the Commercial Aircraft Corp of China, an aircraft researcher and manufactur­er. He said internatio­nal corporatio­ns would be hurt most by a trade war.

“When we first invested here, we found that the United States has more restrictio­ns in this industry, so we were very cautious,” Ye said. “Now we worry that we might be treated unfairly in the industry because of the emotions stirred up by the trade tensions.”

Shiao said he is optimistic that China and US will eventually work out their difference­s.

“The economic relationsh­ip is too big to fail,” Shiao said. “It’s too important to fail.”

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