
Flagship Chinese companies, spanning sectors from tech to retail, are increasingly shunning the United States and expanding in less-developed markets such as Southeast Asia, where they can leverage historic low-cost advantages and build out supply chains, a Goldman Sachs strategist said.
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Chinese exports to non-US markets have grown at a compound annual rate of about 7.5 per cent since 2018, according to a research note by the investment bank. In contrast, exports to the US have declined by 0.6 per cent annually over the same period.
“Overall, we still see the overseas revenue is still growing,” said Fu, who works in the investment bank’s Global Investment Research Division. “And another thing, on products, China has been moving along the value-added curve.”
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Facing the US market, she said, “for many Chinese companies, they had to shift away or diversify their destinations”.