Global Times

US firms still eyeing China

Investment continuing despite trade tension

- By Xie Jun

US oil giant Exxon Mobil Corp is planning to invest $10 billion in a chemical project in South China’s Guangdong Province, and experts said it shows that US heavyweigh­ts won’t change their long-term business strategy despite the efforts by US President Donald Trump to create trade friction between the two countries.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said during a meeting with Exxon Mobil Chairman Darren Woods on Friday that Exxon Mobil is “more than welcome” to carry out large investment­s in petrochemi­cal engineerin­g projects in China, according to a statement published on gov.cn on Friday.

On Wednesday, Exxon Mobil Corp said that it had signed a cooperatio­n framework agreement with the Guangdong provincial government to build a chemical complex in a local industrial park.

The project, which should start in 2023, is still currently “subject to a final investment decision,” a statement from Exxon Mobil said. The company didn’t reply to requests for comment from the Global Times by press time.

Exxon Mobil also said it intends to participat­e in the Huizhou LNG receiving terminal, a project that is currently underway in Guangdong.

Lin Boqiang, director of the China Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University, said that the US is increasing­ly eyeing the Chinese market for liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports and LNG infrastruc­ture constructi­on. This is partly because the local markets in the US are increasing­ly saturated, and also because the Chinese government is pushing marketorie­nted reform in the natural gas sector, Lin said.

In February, US-based Cheniere Energy Inc signed a deal to sell LNG to China National Petroleum Corp, which was the first long-term contract to import LNG to China from the US, according to domestic media reports.

Wider interest

Apart from energy cooperatio­n, US companies in other sectors are also mounting efforts to invest in the Chinese market, despite the two countries’ deteriorat­ing trade relations.

US car manufactur­er Tesla, for example, has increased the registered capital of its Shanghai subsidiary to 4.67 billion yuan ($683 million) from 100 million yuan, according to the National Enterprise Credit Informatio­n Publicity System. Tesla announced in July it would build an electric car manufactur­ing plant in Shanghai.

Investment in China by US firms surged by 12 percent on a yearly basis from January to July, according to data released by the Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) on August 16.

Bai Ming, a research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, said that this investment trend shows that China is more and more attractive to overseas firms, given the ample demand and improving business environmen­t in the domestic market.

“US companies are rational. They won’t change their long-term business strategy just because of certain trade policies against China,” Bai told the Global Times on Sunday.

Lin also noted that by setting up companies in China, US companies can bypass tariff risks caused by the trade friction.

China is showing a welcoming attitude to investment from the US and other countries as a signal that it will stick to the opening-up process, despite the trade tension, Lin noted.

“I don’t think the trade dispute will fundamenta­lly change the trend of trade between China and the US; neither will it change the warming-up of investment between the two countries,” he said.

A total of 35,239 foreign-invested companies were newly establishe­d in China in the first seven months of this year, up by 99.1 percent on a yearly basis, the MOFCOM data showed.

“US companies are rational. They won’t change their long-term business strategy just because of certain trade policies against China.” Bai Ming Research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n

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 ?? File photo: VCG ?? A mascot dressed as a bottle of Mobil at a basketball tournament in Dongguan, South China’s Guangdong Province
File photo: VCG A mascot dressed as a bottle of Mobil at a basketball tournament in Dongguan, South China’s Guangdong Province

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