The Borneo Post

China a sweet spot for US companies’ earnings

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SHANGHAI: Trade tensions between Washington and Beijing may be running high but Corporate America is finding China to be a reliable source of profit growth this year.

Whether they sell constructi­on equipment, semiconduc­tors or coffee, many major US companies have reported stronger secondquar­ter earnings and revenue from their Chinese operations in recent weeks.

They are benefiting from a Chinese economy that is growing at almost 7 per cent, several times the rate of US expansion, a Chinese housing boom, and a slide in the US dollar, which makes American exports more competitiv­e and increases dollar earnings once they are translated from foreign currencies.

Chinese President Xi Jinping’s ambitious plan to build a new Silk Road that will improve links between China and dozens of countries in Asia and Europe, and includes many billions of dollars of new roads, bridges, railways and power plants – is also helping American firms to sell heavy equipment and other products.

Caterpilla­r Inc, a bellwether for industrial demand in China and beyond, reported its sales in Asia-Pacific rose 25 per cent in

We now expect demand in China to remain strong through the rest of the year. Brad Halverson, Caterpilla­r’s group president and chief financial officer

the second quarter – thanks to China.

Shipments of large excavators to Chinese customers more than doubled in the first half of the year.

“We now expect demand in China to remain strong through the rest of the year,” Brad Halverson, Caterpilla­r’s group president and chief financial officer, told investors.

Caterpilla­r’s Japanese rivals Komatsu and Hitachi Constructi­on Machinery Co reported similar strength in demand for heavy machinery. Komatsu’s China sales almost doubled in the firm’s AprilJune quarter.

“China’s grown pretty well relative to the US over this period and the currency’s relationsh­ip has changed in favor of the US companies,” said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at the Leuthold Group in Minneapoli­s.

Chinese companies are also benefiting from the robust domestic economy.

For example, Chinese auto manufactur­er Geely Automobile Holdings announcing last week that its July sales climbed 89 per cent from the year-earlier-month.

Geely and many other major Chinese companies report their results in the next few weeks.

American companies in China have been collective­ly reporting better prospects even as they complain that the Chinese authoritie­s are not allowing them enough access to parts of the Chinese market and discrimina­ting against them as they seek to compete against Chinese rivals.

The Trump administra­tion has been considerin­g punitive tariffs against a range of Chinese goods but it has held off on taking action after Beijing backed tougher United Nations Security Council sanctions against North Korea earlier this month.

And despite some negatives in the Sino-US relationsh­ip, a July report by the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai showed that 82 per cent of US companies in China expect revenues to increase this year, up from 76 per cent a year ago. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Employees work at a production line inside a factory of Saic GM Wuling, in Liuzhou, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China. Trade tensions between Washington and Beijing may be running high but Corporate America is finding China to be a reliable...
Employees work at a production line inside a factory of Saic GM Wuling, in Liuzhou, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China. Trade tensions between Washington and Beijing may be running high but Corporate America is finding China to be a reliable...

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