BEIJING (AP) — A truce in a U.S.-Chinese tariff
war and Beijing’s promises to open more of its state-dominated economy
are raising hopes among investors.
But Beijing has tempered expectations, while companies express frustration over the halting pace of market-opening moves.
The
China Daily, an English-language newspaper aimed at foreign readers,
warned the two sides have yet to put last week’s agreement on paper
after President Donald Trump suspended a planned tariff hike. In
exchange, Trump said Beijing would buy up to $50 billion of American
farm goods, a pledge China has yet to confirm.
“There is always the possibility that
Washington may decide to cancel the deal if it thinks that doing so will
better serve its interests,” said the newspaper. It called on the Trump
administration to “avoid backpedaling.”
Business
groups welcomed the truce as a possible step toward ending the costly,
15-month-old fight but said it was a small one. Talks broke down earlier
after Trump accused Beijing of backsliding on promises Washington
believed were locked in.
Friday’s agreement
coincided with China’s announcement of a timetable to carry out a 2017
promise to abolish limits on foreign ownership of some finance
businesses, starting with futures trading firms on Jan. 1. Securities
firms and mutual fund managers follow later in the year.
Investors
saw that as a commitment to freer trade. Chinese officials say it has
nothing to do with the trade talks and isn’t a concession to Washington.
Over
the past 18 months, President Xi Jinping’s government also has promised
to allow full foreign ownership in banking, insurance and auto
manufacturing in hopes of making its slowing, state-dominated economy
more competitive and productive.
Chinese
market-opening initiatives follow a standard script. Authorities
announce dramatic but vague promises that raise hopes abroad. Six months
to a year passes while companies wait to see regulations. Many are
dismayed when they impose costly licensing requirements or curbs on the
size of a business.
None addresses U.S.
complaints that plans for government-led creation of Chinese competitors
in robotics and other industries violate Beijing’s market-opening
commitments and are based on stealing or pressuring companies to hand
over technology.
Foreign companies are
frustrated that Beijing is moving so gradually 17 years after joining
the free-trading World Trade Organization. China, the biggest global
exporter, is widely seen as having benefited most from freer trade but
faces complaints it violates the rules and spirit of the WTO by blocking
access to its own markets and subsidizing Chinese competitors.
“China’s
opening-up process needs to move beyond piecemeal changes and instead
embrace an absolute approach in which China goes from ‘increasingly
open’ to ‘open’,” said Joerg Wuttke, the president of the European Union
Chamber of Commerce in China.
Chinese
leaders want foreign capital, skills and competition for an economy
where huge but inefficient state companies still control industries
including oil and gas, telecoms, banking, insurance and power
generation.
Beijing wants more foreign
involvement to help improve China’s finance industry but remains
skeptical about the maturity and capability of its own domestic players,
said Lester Ross, a lawyer in Beijing for the firm WilmerHale.
Still,
“There is a lot of attractiveness” for foreign banks, insurers and
other competitors in China’s fledgling market, he said.
Opening
its own markets also gives Beijing leverage to ask the United States
and other governments to let wholly Chinese-owned banks, insurance and
other companies into their markets, Ross said.
Beijing
allowed full foreign ownership of electric car producers starting last
year. Restrictions on commercial vehicle manufacturing end next year and
for passenger vehicles in 2022.
That
reflects confidence Chinese electric car brands including BYD Auto and
BAIC, which are among the global industry’s biggest producers by
vehicles sold, can compete with foreign rivals.
Global
automakers that until now were required to work through state-owned
partners are so deeply enmeshed in those ventures that most plan to
stick with them. Buying out partners could cost billions of dollars and
the foreigners would lose their political connections.
“China
is accelerating the pace of opening, but we still need to see those
implementing regulations in place and how fast those are carried out,”
said Ross.
Foreign banks are applying to set
up shop in China following an August 2018 pledge to allow full foreign
ownership. But they need an eye-wateringly high minimum capital of 40
billion yuan ($5.7 billion) to operate in China or 8 billion yuan ($1.1
billion) to conduct cross-border services.
That’s
beyond the reach of all but the richest foreign institutions but
affordable for state-owned Chinese banks, some the biggest global
competitors.
A handful of American, European
and Japanese banks have gotten approvals to set up Chinese ventures.
It’s unclear if they met the capital requirement or if regulators eased
that as a concession to Washington and other trading partners.
In
insurance, foreign investors face a time-consuming licensing process
requiring them to apply in each one of China’s 36 provinces and major
cities and wait up to a year for approvals. That could take up to a
decade.
“China’s efforts to boost investor
confidence face significant headwinds,” said Andrew Coflan and Allison
Sherlock of Eurasia Group in a report.
Another
hurdle: Government controls on the movement of money into and out of
China that add to the cost and difficulty of bringing in investment
capital and taking home profits.
Such obstacles “make entrance by foreign financial firms a challenge, even with no ownership caps,” said Coflan and Sherlock.
Also
Tuesday, the Chinese post office said fees it pays the United States
and other countries to deliver packages will nearly triple through 2025
under an agreement following complaints by Washington.
Payments
will rise 27% next year and by 164% in total through 2025 under the
Sept. 25 agreement by members of the Universal Postal Union, the State
Postal Bureau said in a statement.
The Trump
administration complained the U.S. Post Office was subsidizing Chinese
exporters, which it said pay too little to deliver the vast flow of
packages generated by online commerce.
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