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China's Export Machine Is Grabbing More of the Global Market

Raphael

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https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...ine-defying-gravity-grabs-global-market-share

China is eating up a larger chunk of the world’s shrinking trade pie.

Brushing off rising wages, a shrinking workforce and intensifying competition from lower cost nations from Vietnam to Mexico, China’s global export share climbed to 14.6 percent last year from 12.9 percent a year earlier. That’s the highest proportion of world exports ever in International Monetary Fund data going back to 1980.

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Yet even as its export share climbs globally, manufacturing’s slice of China’s economy is waning as services and consumption emerge as the new growth drivers. For the global economy, a slide in China’s exports this year isn’t proving any respite as an even sharper slump in its imports erodes a pillar of demand.


Those trends are likely to be replicated in August data due Thursday. Exports are estimated to fall 4 percent from a year earlier and imports are seen dropping 5.4 percent, leaving a trade surplus of $58.85 billion, according to a survey of economists by Bloomberg News as of late Tuesday.

While China’s advantage in low-end manufacturing has been seized upon by Donald Trump’s populist campaign for the U.S. presidency, the shift into higher value-added products from robots to computers is also pitting China against developed-market competitors from South Korea to Germany. A weaker yuan risks exacerbating global trade tensions, which became a hot button issue at the G-20 meeting in Hangzhou over cheap steel shipments.

"All the talk we have heard over the last few years about China losing its global competitive advantage is nonsense," said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at AMP Capital Investors in Sydney. "This will all further fuel increasing trade tensions as already evident in the U.K. with the Brexit vote and in the U.S. with the support for Trump’s populist protectionist platform."

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China is also facing opposition to its global shopping spree and calls from bodies such as the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China for improved market access.

A key driver of China’s export share gains is its move toward more sophisticated assembly, especially in electronics, which eliminates the need to source components from a vast supply chain across Asia, said Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian economic research at HSBC Holdings Plc in Hong Kong. That’s hurting companies and economies from Singapore to Thailand, Malaysia, Taiwan and South Korea, said Neumann.

The government is subsidizing higher technology industries including new advanced information technology, robotics, and new energy vehicles under its "Made in China 2025" plan. More is to come as President Xi Jinping’s blueprint envisions global competitiveness within a decade in 10 industries from machine tools and robots to advanced railway equipment and medical devices.

China increasingly is turning into an economic rival as it pushes to produce higher-value exports, said German Chancellor Angela Merkel on a trip to the nation in June. Those stern words from the leader of China’s fifth biggest trade partner pale in comparison with the rhetoric from Trump, who has accused China of raping the U.S. in "the greatest theft in the history of the world."

"Political support for open trade and investment is evaporating globally and no one has more to lose than China," said David Loevinger, a former China specialist at the U.S. Treasury who is now an analyst at fund manager TCW Group Inc. in Los Angeles. "China has become the bogey man for opponents of globalization."

Trade Backlash
At the G-20 meeting in Hangzhou "China took a drubbing behind the scenes over its steel exports, which have flooded global markets and become a symbol of trade imbalances that have fed resentment across nations," said Pauline Loong, managing director at research firm Asia-analytica in Hong Kong. "Protectionism is China’s biggest worry."

The latest IMF data for the first quarter of this year shows China’s market share edged down in January and February -- notoriously volatile months because of a week-long Lunar New Year holiday -- and bounced back again in March, indicating the nation’s manufacturers are set to at least hold on to previous gains. Last year, the U.S. also increased its share while Russia was the biggest decliner among the top 15 exporters as oil prices fell.

Brand Restraint
But it’s not all upside for China. While it’s successfully transitioning into medium-end technologies, it has yet to make the leap into high-value-added exports, says Andrew Polk, Beijing-based head of China research at Medley Global Advisors, which advises hedge funds and other institutional investors.

"Maybe they can, but it remains an open question," he said. "The highest value-add is in intangible items like branding. Right now, there is not really a globally branded Chinese company that stands for high quality."

Yet even without its own Coca-Cola, Nike or Apple equivalent on the world stage, China’s export juggernaut is winning by default as other major exporters fall behind.

"After having come this far I see no reason why China’s march up the value-chain would suddenly stop," said James Laurenceson, deputy director of the Australia-China Relations Institute at the University of Technology in Sydney. "Chinese companies are competing outside their home base against the best in the world, and winning. This points to a hyper-competitive manufacturing sector, not one losing its shine."
 
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Honestly.
losing china will be a massive loss to world industrialist capacity.
 
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Volvo to export Chinese-built S90 sedan to Europe, U.S.

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The S90 is a key model for Volvo.

September 6, 2016 11:49 CET -- UPDATED: Sept. 6 22:45 CET

A Volvo executive said that the automaker will export the Chinese-built, long-wheelbase S90 sedan to Europe and the United States while offering it in the Chinese market.

The stretched S90 will be assembled at Volvo's plant in the northeast China city of Daqing.

Last week, Volvo's China sales chief, Yuan Xiaolin, announced Volvo's plans to export the sedan during a press briefing at the Chengdu auto show.

When asked about the plans, a spokesman at Volvo's headquarters in Sweden told Automotive News Europe in an email that no decision has been made on S90 exports from China.

The S90 is a key model for Volvo as the automaker seeks to position itself to take on German premium marques BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Audi.

In Europe, the model is built at Volvo's plant in Torslanda, Sweden, according to the Automotive News Europe plant assembly map.

The vehicle is expected to hit the Chinese market late this year. Yuan did not indicate when Volvo would begin exporting the S90.

The long-wheelbase S90 will be the fifth Volvo vehicle produced in China. The XC60 crossover and the long-wheelbase versions of the S80 and S60 are built at Volvo's plant in Chengdu, while the first-generation XC90 is produced in Daqing.

The S90 will be the second Volvo model to be exported from China. The Swedish automaker ships the stretched S60 from its Daqing plant to the United States.

In the first eight months of the year, Volvo sold 54,496 vehicles in China, up 10 percent from the same period last year.

http://europe.autonews.com/article/...-export-chinese-built-s90-sedan-to-europe-u.s.
 
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A weaker yuan risks exacerbating global trade tensions

Blaming yuan for under-valued, again? Those hypocrites should know very well which currency is under-valued, which is over-valued, let's not pretend to be ignorant about their own financial positions and monetary strategy.

The government is subsidizing higher technology industries including new advanced information technology, robotics, and new energy vehicles under its "Made in China 2025" plan. More is to come as President Xi Jinping’s blueprint envisions global competitiveness within a decade in 10 industries from machine tools and robots to advanced railway equipment and medical devices.
pitting China against developed-market competitors from South Korea to Germany

China's industrial scale far exceeds any other nation, and comprises of a full spectrum of industries. Labor intensive industrial produce has already dropped to below 20% of total exports, this sector will remain but continue to fade down. Yes, "Made in China 2025" directly targets only the highest benchmarks like SK and Germany, no settling for mediocre or anything else.

a trade surplus of $58.85 billion
China is also facing opposition to its global shopping spree

Running a trade surplus of $600 billion per year, China should continue to expand global investments, exporting more capital. Dropping investment barriers (say signing BIT's) is a win-win deal for both China (a creditor nation) and indebted economies (debtor nations), let's be pragmatic.
 
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China is eating up a larger chunk of the world’s shrinking trade pie.

Looks at India! Doing very poorly.

Looks like the age of cheap labor and unregulated manufacturing rewarding global market share is over.

This must be a serious warning light for some countries in ASEAN which bet their economic growth on cheap labor and TPP style hard opening up.

Instead,they need to devise national strategic and focus on their strength to achieve a certain level of competitiveness.

If they seek quick solutions, what they will end up with is forever an impoverished status.

Yet even as its export share climbs globally, manufacturing’s slice of China’s economy is waning as services and consumption emerge as the new growth drivers. For the global economy, a slide in China’s exports this year isn’t proving any respite as an even sharper slump in its imports erodes a pillar of demand.

The slump in imports are basically due to:

1. Cheaper commodity prices. As @Shotgunner51 had shown earlier, while China's import of certain commodities such as crude oil grew, the cost of import declined.

2. China's growing national capacity to manufacture key industrial components such as semiconductors and engines, which traditionally took up a huge slice in China's imports.

A weaker yuan risks exacerbating global trade tensions, which became a hot button issue at the G-20 meeting in Hangzhou over cheap steel shipments.

Wrong, no body cares about weaker Yuan (even if it is true), other than some political pundits in the US who like to goad the voter into a direction they want.

"All the talk we have heard over the last few years about China losing its global competitive advantage is nonsense," said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at AMP Capital Investors in Sydney.

I hope no body will believe you, sir. China is collapsing. You just sit back and watch. Do nothing.

China is also facing opposition to its global shopping spree and calls from bodies such as the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China for improved market access.

Still taking up high value assets such as Syngenta and Kuka.

@ahojunk , money walks, talk talks.

Chinese firms bid for Brazil generator company
China Daily, September 7, 2016

Two Chinese companies are bidding for a major stake in Brazil's fourth largest energy generator Santo Antonio Energia SA, amongst other suitors such as a Canadian asset management company, according to sources quoted by Bloomberg.

The two companies, China Three Gorges Corp and State Grid Corp of China, are competing with Canada's Brookfield Asset Management Inc for 28.6 percent of shares in the Brazilian company, the report said.

The Santo Antonio hydropower plant has 3,150 megawatts of generating capacity, which is sufficient for 40 million people, according to its website.

"Currently, the US is a major foreign investor in the Latin American country, but China has competitive edges in terms of financing capability and project management," he said. "Chinese companies should work together in Brazil and form a united alliance, especially in the aspects of electricity development, infrastructure construction and heavy equipment manufacturing."


China increasingly is turning into an economic rival as it pushes to produce higher-value exports, said German Chancellor Angela Merkel on a trip to the nation in June.

I wonder if they think this is a crime.

Trump, who has accused China of raping the U.S.

I am sure he spoke figuratively.

"Maybe they can, but it remains an open question," he said. "The highest value-add is in intangible items like branding. Right now, there is not really a globally branded Chinese company that stands for high quality."

Wrong. Ever heard of DJI?
 
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Pls rephrase your words, I can't understand your broken English.
Thanks.
Because of China's real estate economy, afraid it crash
And Conflicts and wars between China and its neighbors
房地产崩盘和周边危机
 
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Because of China's real estate economy, afraid it crash
And Conflicts and wars between China and its neighbors
房地产崩盘和周边危机
Dunno what r u talking about, related to export?
Pls read August 20-26th issue of the Economist.
:offtopic:
 
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