News roundup: Rocky times ahead for China-U.S. business

Top China news for December 14, 2016. Get this daily digest delivered to your inbox by signing up at supchina.com/subscribe.

'--FILE--Wang Jianlin, Chairman of Wanda Group, attends a signing ceremony for a tourism project in Haikou city, south China's Hainan province, 30 November 2016.

TODAY’S TOP STORIES

Dread ahead for U.S.-China trade?

Fear and uncertainty about trade and investment between China and the U.S. among businesspeople, journalists and financiers have reached levels not seen for almost two decades. Some of the worries are caused by months of mixed signals from Chinaโ€™s economy and the perception of growing Chinese protectionism, but in the last two weeks, statements โ€” mostly on Twitter โ€” from president-elect Donald Trump have turned up the trepidation dial. A small selection from todayโ€™s news shows the diverse range of the anxieties:

Bloomberg published an opinion piece by Noah Smith on Chinese real estate that says that โ€œeven ifโ€ฆthe housing market isnโ€™t a true bubble, a downturn could still wreak a lot of damage on the Chinese economy โ€” and on all the economies around the world that are dependent on China.โ€ Reuters notes that โ€œBitcoin surged to its highest level in nearly three years on Tuesday as a result of volatility in Chinese stock markets ahead of an expected interest rate increase by the U.S. Federal Reserve.โ€ Last week,ย The China Projectย published a Q&A with a Chinese Bitcoin miner who predicts that the digital currency has โ€œa good chance to exceed the USD1,000 mark once again.โ€

Peter Fuhrman, the CEO of a โ€œGreater China-focused specialist international investment bank and advisory firm,โ€ writes in the Financial Times that โ€œ2017 is shaping up to be a highly eventful, taut and precarious year for China-U.S. relations.โ€ Bloomberg saysย that General Motorsโ€™ joint venture with SAIC Motor Corp. is being investigated, following a report in the state-run China Daily that authorities were planning to penalize an unnamed U.S. automaker for price fixing.

Meanwhile, the chairman of Wanda Group โ€” and Chinaโ€™s richest man โ€” Wang Jianlin (pictured above) issued a stark warning to Donald Trump at a press conference and published his answers on his companyโ€™s website:

  • Yesterday, I met with the president of Motion Picture Association of America, who said he wants to meet with Mr. Trump and asked me what message I would like delivered. I told him to tell Mr. Trump that I have ten billion dollars of investments in the United States and more than 20,000 employees there who wouldnโ€™t have anything to eat should things be handled poorly, and nothing else mattered.

Henry Kissinger on China-U.S. relations in the age of Trump

This morning, Henry Kissinger spoke at an event in New York on the subject โ€œU.S.-China Relations in the Trump-Xi Era.โ€ The China Project was one of a handful of media organizations in attendance. Weโ€™ll publish a full review of the event later this week, but for now, we thought it newsworthy enough to highlight some of Kissingerโ€™s more notable remarks.

Health care: China faces a huge problem with strokes and diabetes

Today on The China Project, we publish a Q&A with Dr. Jeffrey Drazen, editor-in-chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, the worldโ€™s oldest continuously published medical publication, which recently launched a Chinese website. Dr. Drazen tells us about the unique problems China has dealing with strokes and diabetes.

More China stories worth your time are summarized below.

BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:

  • China credit expands most since March on robust mortgage lending / Bloomberg
    โ€œChinaโ€™s broadest measure of new lending jumped the most since March, boosted by borrowing for home loans and a resurgence of shadow-banking activity,โ€ reports Bloomberg, with analysts noting that government measures to rein in lending appear to be failing and that further tightening measures may be expected.
  • Why is China so afraid of U.S. Fedโ€™s looming interest rate increase? / SCMP
    โ€œBeijing has a good reason to be nervous because of what happened to China after the Fedโ€™s last interest rate rise on December 16, 2015 โ€” its first increase for nine years.โ€
  • Developers, funds target China demand for co-working space amid startup boom / Reuters
    โ€œCo-workingโ€™s popularity is helping developers and financial investors tap new revenue sources in China and cushion the impact of the softening retail and office property sectors as the worldโ€™s second-largest economy slows,โ€ writes Clare Jim. โ€œBut the highly cyclical nature of the startupsโ€™ business model also exposes them to new risks.โ€
  • Wandaโ€™s $150 million โ€˜Great Wallโ€™ to test Chinaโ€™s film boom / Bloomberg
    The filmโ€™s debut in China this week will be โ€œa test of blockbuster demand in a cinema market thatโ€™s slipped from boom to bust,โ€ Bloomberg reports. โ€œProspects that the movie will draw audiences across continents have also raised expectations that it will be the new model for China-Hollywood collaboration.โ€
  • What gas stations in China offer investors / WSJ
    โ€œChinaโ€™s largest refiner, Sinopec, is considering hitting up Hong Kong investors for another cool $10 billion, this time in the form of an initial public offering for its retail gas-station business.โ€

POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:

  • โ€˜Friends forever?โ€™ China wary of Rex Tillerson wooing away Russia / The Guardian
    Trumpโ€™s nomination of the ExxonMobil chief as secretary of state is โ€œfueling fears that the president-electโ€™s courtship of the Kremlin could be part of a bold strategic bid to isolate China.โ€
  • For Chinaโ€™s state media, Trump victory is a symptom of the โ€˜American diseaseโ€™ / NYT
    โ€œA flow of articles in Communist Party publications in recent weeks has argued that the United Statesโ€™ tumultuous past year showed it to be dysfunctional and dissolute, and blighted by corruption, social and political polarization, reckless debt and an enfeebled news media.โ€
  • Too big to fail: China maps out its Trump strategy / Reuters
    Despite recent tensions over Taiwan, China โ€œexpects a transactional relationship with the deal-making Trump, especially on trade.โ€ A source connected to the Chinese leadership told Reuters, โ€œTrump is a businessman. He wants a dealโ€ฆ He wants the biggest benefit at the smallest cost.โ€
  • Donโ€™t spread โ€˜straight-man cancer,โ€™ China feminist warns Trump / The Guardian
    Zheng Churan, a Chinese activist, wrote, โ€œEven across the Pacific, in the faraway land of China, there are constantly reports of you and your governmentโ€™s involvement in sexual discrimination. We wish you to watch out, the feminists worldwide are speaking, and we are watching you.โ€
  • Popular Chinese Muslim website down after posting letter critical of Xi / Reuters
    โ€œUsers of China Muslim Net, one of China’s main websites carrying material by and about the Hui, a large and relatively well-assimilated community of Chinaโ€™s Muslims, say they have been unable to access the website since Saturday.โ€
  • Opinion: China next crackdown target: Universities / Washington Post
    โ€œMr. Xi is demanding loyalty to an ideology that has been abandoned for some time by most Chinese, who thrive in a system of vigorous if imperfect capitalism,โ€ writes the editorial board. โ€œNo amount of indoctrination is going to change that.โ€
  • Communist Party mouthpiece quotes China Daily as โ€˜foreign mediaโ€™ to reassure public over slowing economy / SCMP
    โ€œWednesdayโ€™s front page of the top party mouthpiece Peopleโ€™s Daily quoted โ€˜foreign mediaโ€™ to help boost confidence in the โ€˜new normalโ€™ of Chinaโ€™s slower economic growth, but the line was actually taken from China Daily, an official English-language state-run newspaper.โ€
  • U.S. ready to confront Beijing on South China Sea: admiral / Reuters
    โ€œWe will not allow a shared domain to be closed down unilaterally no matter how many bases are built on artificial features in the South China Sea,โ€ said Admiral Harry Harris, head of the U.S. Pacific Command. โ€œWe will cooperate when we can, but we will be ready to confront when we must.โ€
  • China military tells Myanmar to ensure border stability / Reuters
    โ€œChina is concerned at the armed clashes in northern Myanmar injuring Chinese border residents, and hopes Myanmar can strengthen border management, prevent stray bullets entering into China and maintain the peace and tranquility of the border,โ€ Chinaโ€™s Defense Ministry said in a statement.
  • Pageant silences beauty queen, a critic of China, at U.S. contest / NYT
    The organizers of the Miss World pageant have barred Anastasia Lin, a Chinese-born Canadian citizen who has been an outspoken critic of human rights abuses in China, from speaking to the media and from attending the American premiere of a documentary she appears in if she wishes to compete in their event.

SOCIETY AND CULTURE:

  • Lost lives: The battle of Chinaโ€™s invisible children to recover missed years / Reuters
    For second children born during the years of Chinaโ€™s one-child policy who were denied social welfare benefits such as free education, its end means โ€œscrambling to make up for lost years, resentful as they fear this recognition may have come too late and unsure what the government is going to do to help them make up for those years.โ€
  • Expensive foreign degrees lose edge in competitive Chinese job market, study finds / Caixin
    โ€œNearly 70 percent of Chinese students who returned after studying abroad said they were โ€˜unsatisfiedโ€™ with job opportunities at home because an overseas degree no longer guarantees them better pay than those who studied in China,โ€ a survey by the Center for China & Globalization found.
  • China plans for a series of disappearing bridges / Architectural Digest
    A $5 million project designed by French-born architect Martin Duplantier at the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Wulingyuan will rely on materials such as mirrored stainless steel and black stone to create optical illusions of invisible footbridges amid the dramatic forests and rock formations of the area.
  • โ€˜People hope my book will be Chinaโ€™s Star Warsโ€™: Liu Cixin on Chinaโ€™s exploding sci-fi scene / The Guardian
    โ€œChinese sci-fi does have its own unique themes as well, such as the attempt to re-deduce and re-display the ancient history of China from a sci-fi angle,โ€ says Liu Cixin, author of the Hugo Awardโ€“winning Three-Body Problem.
  • Chinaโ€™s huge, eerie tower blocks that will soon house millions / Wired
    Since 2012, photographer Aurelien Marechal has been documenting the construction of high-rise housing that will accommodate rural Chinese on the outskirts of cities โ€” and are still without residents. โ€œThey look like ghost towns,โ€ he says. โ€œTheyโ€™re suburbs in the middle of nowhere.โ€