China Daily

Dozens of big businesses sign up for import expo

- By TANG ZHIHAO tangzhihao@chinadaily.com.cn

Global enterprise­s are showing strong interest in seizing opportunit­ies at the third China Internatio­nal Import Expo, or CIIE, which is to run from Nov 5-10 in Shanghai, despite the outbreak of COVID-19.

The CIIE Bureau, one of the organizers of the event, released a second participan­t list to domestic buyers in early April.

Of the 125 enterprise­s on the list, nearly one-sixth are firsttime participan­ts, which include some heavyweigh­t players in their industries. Also, one-third are Fortune Global 500 companies.

According to the CIIE Bureau, there are newcomers in all six sections of the CIIE, namely trade in services, automobile­s, consumer goods, intelligen­t and informatio­n technology, healthcare and food products.

This year, Swiss luxury brands holding company Richemont will make its debut at the annual gathering.

The group added its name to the 2020 event during an online signing ceremony on April 16.

Richemont, owner of several of the world’s leading luxury companies, said it will bring 13 high-end brands of jewelry, watches, writing instrument­s and fashion accessorie­s, including Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, Piaget and Vacheron Constantin, to its 500-square-meter exhibition area.

The company also inked a strategic cooperatio­n memorandum of understand­ing with the CIIE Bureau, making Richemont the first exhibitor to sign such an agreement in the history of the CIIE.

“Over the years, China has been one of the most valued markets for Richemont,” said Jerome Lambert, CEO of Richemont.

He added that “China boasts broad market prospects because the country is in the fast lane toward greater consumptio­n.”

The COVID-19 outbreak will not change Richemont’s confidence in China’s economic recovery, as evidenced by the signing of the third expo and strategic cooperatio­n, Lambert said.

Apollo Future Mobility Group, a Hong Kong-based automobile company, will make its debut at the CIIE with a 650-sq-m exhibition area. Also, two commercial banks from Russia and Kyrgyzstan will exhibit in the Trade in Services Exhibition Hall, according to the CIIE Bureau.

Despite the pandemic, global investors remain optimistic about the Chinese market.

Although the pandemic has had an effect on foreign enterprise­s operating in China, there was never a large-scale withdrawal of foreign investment from the market, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

According to the American Chamber of Commerce in China 2020 Business Climate Survey, although American businesses in China are facing problems such as COVID-19, China remains a key priority for most US-invested enterprise­s in the long run.

According to another recent study released by AmCham South China, 75 percent of surveyed US companies said they will not change their reinvestme­nt plans despite the pandemic.

Zhang Xiao, Chinese ambassador to Kazakhstan, said in an article published in Kazakhstan that the COVID-19 outbreak has been controlled effectivel­y in China and the country’s economic situation will brighten. The effects won’t last long and will be limited to small areas, he added.

James Kimonyo has been Rwanda’s ambassador to China since the end of 2019.

He said to Chinese media that he was excited to start his journey in Asia from China and that he is optimistic about the Chinese market. The CIIE is a platform for him to witness China’s sincerity in expanding openingup and Chinese consumers’ huge purchasing power, he added.

China boasts broad market prospects because the country is in the fast lane toward greater consumptio­n.” Jerome Lambert, CEO of Richemont

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