Weak Corporate Earnings Push China, US to Intensify Cooperation

© AFP 2023 / JOHANNES EISELEIn this file picture taken on September 1, 2015, an investor reacts in front of screens showing stock market movements at a brokerage house in Shanghay
In this file picture taken on September 1, 2015, an investor reacts in front of screens showing stock market movements at a brokerage house in Shanghay - Sputnik International
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As corporate earnings are declining in both the Chinese manufacturing and US international business operation, Washington and Beijing might opt to help each other improve their respective economic performance in a win-win deal.

Kristian Rouz — Mainland China's manufacturing is shrinking due to stalled factory-gate prices and corporate revenues falling dramatically as industrial exports generate less profits amidst falling cost-efficiency of Chinese labour. At the same time, US corporate earnings have fallen for two consecutive quarters and are forecast to drop in the third quarter as well due to the dollar's strength and cheap energy. A solution to the corporate underperformance in both nations would be the reigntion of growth in China, triggering a substantial increase in commodity prices, thus spurring US inflation. A quicker expansion in the US' core price index is key to the Fed's raise in borrowing costs, easing demand for the dollar and supporting the profitability of US companies' overseas operations.

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However, in order to boost economic growth, the investment-starved China needs to ensure a stable influx of capital, which is now concentrated in US assets. The realization of this scheme in both Beijing and Washington has led to a bilateral pact of sorts concluded last Friday: as mainland China progresses on its financial and broader economic reform, the US will ensure the renminbi's inclusion in the IMF's basket of reserve currencies, thus providing a significant upgrade to China's investment appeal.

The recent macro data from China and market projections in the US further support such claims.

The mainland's manufacturers reported on Monday their revenues falling the most in roughly four years due to the global overproduction in industrial goods and weak demand. The devalued renminbi has mostly failed to provide a sensible boost to Chinese exports, as China's main rivals in international trade like Vietnam responded with a similar move.

China's industrial profits dropped a massive 8.8% in August year-on-year, according to data published by the Bureau of National Statistics in Beijing. It is their greatest slump since at least 2011, when the government began to publish its figures.

The Chinese manufacturing benchmark index dropped to a three-year low due to the severe underinvestment hindering the modernization of production capacities. Currently, operational expenses of Chinese companies are high as labour has appreciated as well, while productivity is still low. Manufactured goods are lacking competitiveness, resulting in factory gate deflation, while high interest rates impose limits on domestic investment.

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In the US, where the Q3 earnings season is starting on 12 October, many companies are forecast to suffer a third consecutive quarter of negative profits. The ongoing slump in energy, stemming from China's structural complications outlined above and hindering US inflation, is one part of the issue. The second is the strong dollar. International investors are buying into US assets while the Fed's interest rates are still low, moreover, rates are poised to remain near-zero unless inflation accelerates. Either way, one of the most important reasons the US companies' overseas profits are falling is China's turbulence.

In the US, investors are buying mostly bonds and domestic-driven stocks, while companies exposed to growth figures, like in the construction business,  or international headwinds, like most multinationals, are poised to underperform.

No wonder most US-based multinational businesses are interested in mainland China rebounding from its current financial and economic struggle. Meanwhile, Beijing is slowly making progress on liberalizing and deregulating its financial market. The US might indeed want to provide some political support to China's reserve currency bid in the IMF and take other measures to boost Beijing's international financial credibility, however, the intensified US-Chinese rapprochement might take longer given certain political obstacles. 

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