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Chinese Manufacturers Focus on Domestic Markets

Friday, April 16th, 2010

International manufacturing companies active in China are increasingly focused on accessing growing Chinese mainland markets, rather than using the country as an export base, according to a new report.

The 2009/10 China Manufacturing Competitiveness report, co-produced by the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai and Boo z & Co, reveals that 83 per cent (up from 71 per cent two years ago) of surveyed companies said their primary objective for locating manufacturing operations in China was to access the rapidly diversifying Chinese marketplace.

As cost and wage differentials in inland areas of China become more attractive compared to the higher rates in coastal areas, 28 per cent of respondents are considering relocating production facilities to central and southwest China. This serves two functions, helping to reduce factor costs and locating facilities closer to rapidly growing markets across China.

“This report is a snapshot in time of a picture that is rapidly moving,” said Ron Haddock, co-author of the report, “but the old paradigm that China is just a place for cheap labour is changing.”

China Invests in Aircraft Manufacturing

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Manufacturing models keep getting bigger and more ambitious in China. Television news has shown images of the nation’s first domestically manufactured large civil helicopter, which completed its first test flight this week. The AC313 helicopter – which has a maximum take-off weight of 13.8 tonnes and can carry up to 27 passengers – completed its maiden flight in Jingdezhen, Jiangxi province.

The helicopter, which has been designed and manufactured by the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC), has a maximum range of 559 miles, and its uses will include “search and rescue, fighting forest fires, and assisting in fighting fires in cities,” according to state media.

China is investing heavily to upgrade its aviation design and manufacturing capacities. Earlier this week, the government announced that the draft design of China’s first home-built jumbo jet airplane will be completed by the end of 2010. The jet, codenamed C919, will feature a 156-seat and a 168-seat model. It is slated to begin production in 2011, and is targeted to be operational in 2016. The aim is to deliver a jet that is “more comfortable, less oil-consuming and more economical than competitors in the aviation market,” according to Wu Guanghui, chief designer of the Commercial Aviation Corp (COMAC).

As well as developing its own aircraft manufacturing industry, China is also the home to the only Airbus assembly plant outside Europe. Last June, the plant in Tianjin delivered its first China-assembled A320 jet.

Chinese Premier Warns On Industrial Unemployment

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

The warning signs are being flagged for China’s economy – particularly a rising industrial employment imbalance – even though the government has announced it is aiming for 11 per cent growth this year. In a televised speech, Premier Wen Jiabao said the Chinese economy was “facing difficulties.” Wen added that China must deal with “serious challenges in employment” particularly in coastal cities.

China’s labour supply still exceeds demand, and the urban employment situation “remains severe,” according to a senior Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security official quoted in state media. Some 150 million migrant workers headed to the cities in search of work last year, while the total of urban unemployed officially stands at 24 million. Adding a sense of urgency to China’s job creation programmes is the fact that a record total of 6.3 million university graduates will enter the workforce this year.

One solution, according to a state media opinion article is “for local factories and government to finally make decisions on industrial upgrading.” The article adds that while this will likely result in a short-term fall in revenues for factories and the government, it is “crucial for the sustainable development of factories and for addressing other social issues, such as the ongoing regional employment shortage.”

Chinese Sportswear Manufacturer Speeds Up Global Strategy

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

Chinese sportswear manufacturer and retailer Li Ning, founded by a former Chinese Olympic gymnast, has continued its international expansion by announcing a sponsorship deal for Spanish Primera Liga football club Espanyol.

The four-year sponsorship deal with the Barcelona-based team, currently lying 15th in the Spanish league, was confirmed at a signing ceremony on February 26.

Li Ning already sponsors several international athletes, including NBA stars Shaquille O’ Neal, Berni Rodriguez and Baron Davis, and pole-vault world record holder Yelena Isinbayeva. It sponsors the Singapore national badminton team, and provides the apparel for the Spanish national basketball team. The company opened its first overseas sportswear store in Singapore in late 2009, and plans a global roll-out in the coming years.

GM In Hummer Hole After Failed Chinese Bid

Saturday, February 27th, 2010

Is the military-inspired Hummer going for good? Following the collapse of a protracted deal between General Motors and Chinese truck and military vehicles maker Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Machinery regarding the sale of the Hummer brand, the US carmaker seems likely to wind down the ailing Hummer SUV business.

The move is a far cry from last October’s joint statement that Sichuan Tengzhong – despite considerable scepticism from the Chinese government, which has the power of veto on Chinese company acquisitions overseas – had agreed to buy the Hummer brand, trademark, trade names and intellectual property license rights, and would assume existing dealer agreements. The Chinese company had ruled out, however, the possibility of moving Hummer manufacturing operations to China.

In a statement released this week, Sichuan Tengzhong said it had not been able to obtain Chinese regulatory approval for the Hummer purchase. The Chinese government had voiced concerns that as a domestically-focused manufacturing company, Sichuan Tengzhong did not possess the capacity or managerial know-how to control an international vehicle brand, particularly one whose sales have plummeted in recent years.

Manufacturing Goes Greener

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

It’s all about the car in China. Manufacturing news in Chinese state media is currently dominated by stories about Chinese automakers’ profits, new auto industry investments and impressive projections for passenger car sales growth.

Beyond the automobile, however, the other major manufacturing sector to grab the headlines is renewable energy production. Indeed, China has just announced plans to “build a national renewable energy centre to further shore up development of the industry,” according to the state-run China Daily newspaper.

The establishment of the new centre is “in the preliminary planning stages,” according to Han Wenke, Director General of Energy Research Institute, but it will “be responsible for policy-making, key project and programme management, market and industrial operations, database and information platform establishment as well as international exchanges,” according to the report.

Further details are not yet forthcoming, but China’s new renewable energy centre is being heavily supported by the Danish government, which has agreed to invest up to USD18.5 million in the initiative between now and 2013.

China is the world’s third-largest producer of wind power, and produces around 40 per cent of the world’s solar photovoltaic products, according to official figures.

Rising Output Brings The Spectre of Inflation

Monday, January 18th, 2010

China’s factory output grew at its fastest rate on record in December – a month in which manufacturing activity soared in key Asian production economies.

The HSBC China Purchasing Managers’ Index rose to 56.1, up from 55.7 in November, reaching its highest level since the survey began in April 2004. This growth rate is expected to be sustained, and possibly even accelerated, in the coming months, as export orders improve and domestic public investment remains strong. Also in December, India saw its fastest manufacturing growth for seven months, while South Korea’s manufacturing output was at its highest level since August.

In China, the result of heavy government stimulus spending and the wider availability of bank credit in the first half of 2009 are raising inflationary fears. In December, Chinese manufacturers raised their prices at the fastest rate in 17 months.

Some analysts say, however, that overcapacity in many key industrial sectors and tighter monetary control – last week the Beijing government raised the reserve requirement for Chinese banks in an attempt to drain excess liquidity from the economy – may be enough to stave off the threat of unmanageable inflation. Either way, sourcing and manufacturing companies will need to remain very vigilant on pricing trends in the coming months.

Is The Chinese RMB Set For Revaluation?

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Importers and exporters should keep a close eye on the value of the Chinese currency, the RMB, in the coming weeks. Having being effectively pegged at around RMB6.8285 to the US dollar for the duration of the global recession – in order to assist its export economy – China appears to be preparing the ground for a reassessment of the RMB’s exchange value.

State media this week reported comments from Zhang Zhijun, China’s Vice-Foreign Minister, that “the RMB rate’s flexibility may widen.” This follows a similar hint from the People’s Bank of China earlier in the month, and the publication of figures that showed October’s fall in China’s export growth occurred at its slowest year-on-year pace this year, dropping 13.8 per cent – following a 15.2 per cent decline in September.

Although it has faced down strong global pressure to revalue its currency, which many analysts believe is considerably undervalued, China seems likely to make some minor exchange rate tinkering. Adding intrigue to the equation is the fact that the 12th China-European Union Summit in Nanjing at the end of November will feature discussions between top officials from both the European and Chinese Central Banks.

Industrial Designers Tasked With Creating More ‘China Brands’

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

The long-term post-recession recovery of China’s manufacturing industries will be heavily reliant on the diversification of industrial design, according to a leading industrial body.

Zhu Tao, President of the China Industrial Design Association, said that factory closures and job losses caused by the slowdown of global demand over the past year are continuing to hurt the nation’s production heartlands.

As China seeks to diversify its economic base, Zhu added that industrial designers must seek new levels of creativity and adaptability to help promote China-made brands. ”Without our own design, we won’t have our own brands. Without our own brands, we won’t be independent in the world. Being an OEM [country] is no way out,” Zhu told state media.

The Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology notes that China is currently the world’s largest producer of “more than 200 product types, including bicycles, batteries, furniture, shoes and TV sets,” but attention this week turned towards bespoke industrial design and developing China-made brands as Beijing hosted the 2009 Icograda World Design Congress. The event, founded in 1964, has become one of the world’s most important commercial design showcases, and the Beijing edition was expected to attract “more than 1,000 designers from about 100 nations,” according to the organisers.

Exports, Imports & Infrastructure Spending

Monday, November 16th, 2009

The headline figure shows that total Chinese exports fell another 13.8 per cent year on year in October, bringing the percentage drop to 20.5 per cent across the first 10 months of 2009 compared to the same 2008 period. Essentially, China has exported one-fifth less in total value so far this year compared to 2008. The same applies to total imports into China, which dropped 19.9 per cent.

Looking behind the main statistics proves even more informative about the current state of China’s export and import sectors. Low-value export products, such as garments (down 10.9 per cent), textiles (down 12.9 per cent) and shoes (down six per cent) have been hit hard this year. Imports for certain products used in capital and fixed asset investment, however, showed significant growth – crude oil imports are up 9.4 per cent this year, steel is up 10.3 per cent and iron ore has risen 36.8 per cent.

While state media sought a positive spin, noting that the 13.5 per cent October export slump was “the smallest decline rate since January,” it should also be noted that October 2008 was the month that global demand completely crashed along with Wall Street stocks, and the year-on-year export figures for November and December 2009 should be read in that context.

For the foreseeable future, infrastructure investment will continue to drive the Chinese economy – state-funded urban fixed-asset investment rose 33.1 per cent in the first 10 months of 2009, to a staggering RMB15.07 trillion – while state media forecasts exports will “continue on the downward trend until the first quarter next year.”