China will replace the US as the world’s biggest superpower by 2030: UBS survey

In This Article:

President Donald Trump has been cheering his new trade deal with China, calling it “momentous step” toward “a future of fair and reciprocal trade.” But global investors increasingly see China itself as the future.

A new UBS (UBS) survey finds 57% of global investors predict China will replace the U.S. as the world’s biggest superpower by 2030. A majority agrees with that sentiment in every region except the United States, where only 47% expect it will happen.

“We're in a world where economic growth is more dispersed than it used to be,” Michael Crook, head of Americas investment strategy at UBS Global Wealth Management, tells Yahoo Finance’s The First Trade. “On the flip side, what we've seen is from a globalization standpoint is really we've hit peak globalization, so we don't expect that trend to continue even more strongly that, like it has over the last 20 years. But that does change the face of geopolitics and really how we have to think about allies across the world.”

“It certainly has an impact both on business owners in the U.S., but also a lot of the investors that we work with overseas,” he told Dan Roberts and Seana Smith.

In 2017, President XI Jinping laid out his vision to turn China into a “great modern socialist country” by 2050.

FILE - In this Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2020, file photo, U.S. President Donald Trump, right, signs a trade agreement with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, in the East Room of the White House, in Washington. China’s government welcomed an interim trade deal with Washington and said Thursday the two sides need to address each other’s “core concerns.” (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)
In this Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2020 photo, President Donald Trump, right, signs a trade agreement with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, in the East Room of the White House, in Washington. China’s government welcomed an interim trade deal with Washington and said Thursday the two sides need to address each other’s “core concerns.” (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

“Chinese people will enjoy greater happiness and well-being, and the Chinese nation will stand taller and firmer in the world,” Xi said at the time.

But the Chinese economy has been slowing, posting an annual growth rate of 6.1% in 2019, the slowest pace in nearly three decades. And Xi reportedly has been placing financial experts in struggling provinces to help boost economic prospects.

That may be part of the reason why Trump is signaling he’s not worried about losing superpower status to China.

“Our relationship with China has probably never been better. We went through a very rough patch, but it has never, ever been better,” he said in Davos at the World Economic Forum.

And that trade deal may be part of the reason why UBS found investors have turned so bullish — 60% are now optimistic about the world economy, with the number topping 68% here in the U.S.

“They're telling us that some of the risks that we had a year ago are not as large or they don't loom as large,” Crook said. “Political risks, trade risks, certain policy risks that they were worried about have dissipated, at least a bit.”

Read more:

Why we won't get a Phase 2 trade deal 'until sometime in 2021'

Why Trump’s China trade deal could save Boeing

Trump should 'absolutely' get credit for changing the China conversation: analyst