Poll: China exporters worried about trade war, rising
costs at home
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[October 16, 2018]
By Sue-Lin Wong and David Stanway
GUANGZHOU, China (Reuters) - Chinese
exporters are mostly confident they can weather a trade war with the
United States, but worry about collateral damage it might cause
throughout the global economy, according to a Reuters poll of
participants at China's largest trade fair.
Representatives from 91 firms involved in sectors ranging from
industrial machinery to home appliances, motorcycles and new energy
vehicles were surveyed during the Canton Import and Export Fair on Oct
15-16.
Just over 60 percent said they were worried about the trade war in the
first poll carried out by Reuters since the United States imposed
tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods late last month,
escalating the tariff war between the world's two largest economies.
"We wanted to expand this year into the United States, but the trade war
has really thrown a spanner in the works," said Heidi Tan, sales
director at Motoma Power which makes batteries for mobile phones,
including iPhones.
Phone batteries have been hit by U.S. tariffs, and Tan says customers
are already looking to buy from other countries.
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"It is only be a matter of time before factories in Southeast Asia will
be able to make the same batteries," she said.
Still, firms surveyed remained broadly optimistic about foreign markets
despite mounting challenges, with only 28 percent expecting orders to
decline this year, and just 21 percent expecting declines in 2019.
When the twice-yearly fair, which draws thousands of companies, was last
held in April, a Reuters poll found 65 percent of respondents were
concerned about escalating trade tensions, and only 26 percent had
anticipated a full-blown trade war.
In the latest survey, more than 60 percent expected the trade war to
last at least another year, though some said it depends on how long
President Donald Trump remains in the White House.
"The question isn't how long the trade war will last," said Charles Zhu
of Taizhou Jieba Cleaning Products. "The question is how long will Trump
be in power for."
Fifty-five percent of respondents said the government should
"proactively engage in discussions" to try to end the trade war.
Just three respondents thought China should retaliate by restricting
competition.
"One massive advantage China has is our ability to work hard and endure
hardship, we thrive under competition," said Michael Zhuo of Yuyao Ghost
Audio, adding around two thirds of his customers are in the United
States.
"I'm not sure whether the U.S. has factored this into their thinking."
Just under half of the firms surveyed had no business in the United
States.
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Cars to be exported are seen at a port in Lianyungang, Jiangsu
province, China May 31, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer ATTENTION EDITORS -
THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. CHINA OUT.
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KNOCK-ON EFFECT
Many exporters in sectors like solar power and machinery said their
shipments to the United States were negligible, partly as a result of
previous punitive tariffs that forced them to look at markets elsewhere.
But some exporters still expressed worries over how the trade war was
undermining confidence globally.
"The trade war first of all hurts the Chinese economy, where we have
customers, and it could also affect the economies of the countries we do
business with," said Todd Cao, vice-president of Jiangsu Spanl Co. Ltd,
which exports building materials.
Partly as a result of the trade conflict, economists polled by Reuters
earlier this month predicted that China's third-quarter growth be its
weakest since the global financial crisis.
And for many exporters surveyed, the rising costs of doing business in
China, including growing costs of raw materials and high staff turnover,
were more worrying than the Sino-U.S. trade war.
Respondents also listed problems like the crackdown on peer-to-peer
lending and tightening environmental regulations.
Some exporters said customers in emerging market economies were
suffering from a squeeze on dollars that made it harder for them to buy
their products.
"Orders from Turkey, South Africa, Argentina, Iran, Syria and Libya are
all down," said Tory Mak, a sales manager at Guangzhou HD Electronics,
blaming weakening economic conditions in these countries and knock-on
effects from the trade war.
Some firms not directly hurt by the new tariff regime were suffering the
effects of other U.S. policy shifts, including the imposition of
sanctions on Iran.
Firms in the textiles, electric equipment and solar sectors all said
that their business was suffering because they were no longer allowed to
export to the Middle Eastern country.
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"We've not been hit by the tariffs but by the sanctions, which have cut
our trade (with Iran) to zero," said one sales manager who did not want
to be named.
(Reporting by Sue-Lin Wong and David Stanway; Additional reporting by
Shenzhen newsroom; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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