US-China Trade War: American company suffering for the situation

American companies in China have been warned that they are facing a “paradigm shift”, where ties between the United States and China will never return to pre-trade war days.
The uncertainty of the trade war is damaging business, speakers told the Asia-Pacific Council of American Chambers of Commerce (APCAC) Business Summit on Monday in Hong Kong, with the general mood clouded in a lack of clarity.
Not only are firms struggling to adapt to changing business conditions and higher costs, largely due to tariff increases, but mixed messaging coming from the White House also helps compound the feeling on the ground.

“Our biggest concern in the business community is that the rules are changing, we’re adjusting to new economic circumstances, national security challenges, and law enforcement,” said Timothy Stratford, chairman at the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) China, and former assistant US trade representative.

“We need to have some clarity as to how the US and China are dealing with these issues because it is not clear what state we’re operating in.”
At the crux of the uncertainty is whether the trade war will be resolved and if so, how, with speakers complaining over the mixed messaging coming from various parts of the US government.

A Wall Street Journal report on Sunday said that US President Donald Trump was preparing for a signing ceremony at his Mar-a-Lago resort before the end of March with President Xi Jinping.

The cornerstones of the deal would be not only widespread reductions in tariffs on US goods entering the Chinese market, but also huge purchases of American goods by China, including US$18 billion of natural gas from Cheniere Energy.
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The report seemed to contradict the testimony of US trade representative (USTR) Robert Lighthizer, who spoke before the US Congress last week.

Lighthizer was adamant that no deal was close and insisted that the US would not agree to a deal that did not enforce structural changes in the Chinese economy.
“Lighthizer said we’re not going to cave to a weak deal. He said we’re going after a structured deal, we’re not going after a ‘soybean solution’, so when his voice is strong we may get something,” said James McGregor, chairman for Greater China at consultancy firm APCO Worldwide.
“But you never know what the president will do. It’s a very chaotic administration.”

Some US businesses would be glad for such a solution, in reference to China’s increased soybeans purchases since trade war negotiations began last year, so long as it ended the trade war.

Many US companies are supportive of the USTR’s hardline stance on intellectual property theft and forced technology transfer.
It has long been thought that a “transactional” deal would be hard to sell to those companies who have had their intellectual property stolen or their technology compromised.
Indeed, former government officials have discouraged Trump from accepting such a deal, claiming that it would not lead to any long-term benefit for the US economy.

The air of uncertainty is beginning to appear in the balance sheets of US firms in China.

In AmCham China’s annual China Business Climate Survey, released in February, 30 per cent of member companies said profitability fell in 2018, the highest number since 2015.
Meanwhile, 65 per cent of US companies in China are reassessing their strategy because of the changing environment, with 20 per cent mulling supply chain shifts.

The situation is playing into the hands of other countries. Janet de Silva, chief executive of the Toronto Region Board of Trade, told Monday’s event that Canada is benefiting from the damage that the US-China trade war, along with the US government’s hardline stance on immigration, is doing to America’s attractiveness for businesses.