Business World

Asia business sentiment slips from 7-year high

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KUALA LUMPUR — Business confidence among Asian companies slipped for the first time in three quarters, on mounting worries that US President Donald Trump’s protection­ist policies would trigger tit-for-tat reprisals and undermine the global trading system.

The Thomson Reuters/ INSEAD Asian Business Sentiment Index, representi­ng a six-month outlook from 61 firms, fell to 74 in the second quarter from a seven-year high of 79 in the prior three months. The survey was conducted over June 1-15.

While a reading above 50 indicates a positive outlook, this is the first time the number has dropped since September 2017.

The risks to growth are increasing­ly real now, said Antonio Fatas, a Singapore-based economics professor at global business school INSEAD. “Trade war is not a risk but a reality,” he said.

“US tariffs are going up against China but also against some of its traditiona­l allies, such as Canada and the European Union. They are all about to retaliate and today we do not see an easy way out,” Mr. Fatas said.

Mr. Trump has riled key allies with his protection­ist policies, including the imposition of steel and aluminum tariffs on the European Union, Canada and Mexico. On Monday, he threatened to hit China with new tariffs on $ 200 billion in goods. —

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