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Strong sales increase despite uncertainties
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Material costs now a key concern
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Pickup in salary levels and hiring
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Chinese yuan seen depreciating further
Survey results from our Nordic and German corporates continue to deliver a positive business outlook for China, increasing further in terms of staffing, investments and sales. However, profits are unchanged from the last survey. SEB`s China Financial Index increases in March to 61.6 from 58.6 in September and 56.2 one year ago. As expected, the gap continues to widen between manufacturing and service sectors, with the service sector still more optimistic. Recent economic data from China supports this divergence. The official manufacturer purchasing manager index (PMI) came in at 51.7 in February, which is up from 51.0 in January and sharply higher from a year ago. The most recent PMI index for the service sector was also strong.
Sales and profits seen higher, despite demand and material cost concerns
Three out of four in our survey expect sales to improve in the coming six months. At the same time, profit expectations are unchanged from six months ago. A majority of corporates expect increased profits, especially within service- and consumer-related companies. Customer demand continues to be the main concern for surveyed companies, and roughly one in four views competition as its biggest worry. A key finding which stands out in this edition is the increasing concern of material costs for our corporates. One in four indicated this as their main concern, up from very low levels from the last edition and a year ago. This could perhaps be explained by increasing commodity prices during the last few months, specifically in petroleum, copper and iron ore. Hence, sourcing could be contributing to creating profit pressure.
"In this edition, we observe substantially improved business confidence for our Nordic and German companies in China. It`s still a bit surprising given uncertainties such as a high leverage, currency volatility and increased regulations. Expected sales, hiring and investments are all up, but profits stay flat. As noticed in previous editions as well, we continue to see that industries are coping differently, with manufacturing struggling and the service sector outperforming," says Niina Äikäs, General Manager of SEB Shanghai.
"A surprising finding - and opposing the previous survey - is the higher salary levels and hiring. Corporates looking at increasing hiring slightly or significantly is up to 50% from around 30%. At the same time fewer corporates are looking at decreasing staff. Moreover, our respondents are indicating higher salary growth levels with roughly half saying they will increase salaries by 5-6%, up from one in five. These results of increasing salaries and material costs are in line with recent data showing higher inflation in China. The inflation rate has been creeping up the last few years and SEB expects it to reach 2.5% in 2017. If inflation pushes up interest rates that could make debt levels in China difficult to handle and cause financial instability."