US firms in China set for greater competition ahead
Profitability and sales are harder to come by in China as US firms face increasing competition from domestic and foreign players, said a US business group survey on Thursday.
An annual survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai showed a majority of firms believed that competition had intensified, while the number who said they were profitable in 2012 dropped to 73 percent from 78 percent in 2011.
This reflects the challenge for global firms looking to boost profits in faster-growing economies such as China, and underlines the impact of China's slowdown in 2012, where GDP grew at its slowest pace in 13 years.
The 420 US firms surveyed identified rising costs, human resources constraints and heightened domestic competition as the main business challenges, said the report.
"We accept these are going to be the rule rather than the exception in the years to come," said Brenda Foster, president of the chamber at the report's Shanghai launch on Thursday.
Seventy-one percent of firms said revenue had increased versus last year, down from 80 percent in 2011, while those who reported operating margin growth edged down to 48 percent from 51 percent.
As the Chinese boom years of 10 percent-plus GDP growth recede, international firms are preparing themselves for a 'new normal' in China - one less reliant on exports and investment, and more tied to the domestic Chinese market, the survey said.
This meant retail and service sector firms scored higher on the survey's Shanghai Business Confidence Index, measuring confidence in future business opportunities.
Despite the challenges of setting up and operating in China, US businesses are still keen to be on the inside of China's growing domestic market, set to grow 9 percent a year through 2030, according to estimates from consulting firm McKinsey & Co.
The survey data shows that firms making over 10 percent of total global revenue from China rose to 45.5 percent from 41.2 percent, while nearly three-quarters of respondents said they plan to increase investment over 2013, a three-year high.
Intellectual property rights - a topic flagged dramatically by a recent US report linking the Chinese government to international hacking of private information - remained high on the agenda.
Around 70 percent of firms said IPR was "critically important" or "very important" to their business in 2012, up from 68 percent in 2011.
This reflects the challenge for global firms looking to boost profits in faster-growing economies such as China, and underlines the impact of China's slowdown in 2012, where GDP grew at its slowest pace in 13 years.
The 420 US firms surveyed identified rising costs, human resources constraints and heightened domestic competition as the main business challenges, said the report.
"We accept these are going to be the rule rather than the exception in the years to come," said Brenda Foster, president of the chamber at the report's Shanghai launch on Thursday.
Seventy-one percent of firms said revenue had increased versus last year, down from 80 percent in 2011, while those who reported operating margin growth edged down to 48 percent from 51 percent.
As the Chinese boom years of 10 percent-plus GDP growth recede, international firms are preparing themselves for a 'new normal' in China - one less reliant on exports and investment, and more tied to the domestic Chinese market, the survey said.
This meant retail and service sector firms scored higher on the survey's Shanghai Business Confidence Index, measuring confidence in future business opportunities.
Despite the challenges of setting up and operating in China, US businesses are still keen to be on the inside of China's growing domestic market, set to grow 9 percent a year through 2030, according to estimates from consulting firm McKinsey & Co.
The survey data shows that firms making over 10 percent of total global revenue from China rose to 45.5 percent from 41.2 percent, while nearly three-quarters of respondents said they plan to increase investment over 2013, a three-year high.
Intellectual property rights - a topic flagged dramatically by a recent US report linking the Chinese government to international hacking of private information - remained high on the agenda.
Around 70 percent of firms said IPR was "critically important" or "very important" to their business in 2012, up from 68 percent in 2011.