China’s slowdown is taking a rising toll on European profits
FROM luxury brands to car makers, European companies are taking a hit from China’s slowdown, and more trouble is coming for businesses heavily reliant on demand in the Asian economic giant.
Hugo Boss, Burberry Group, and Daimler Truck Holding are among the high-profile names whose bottom line has been hurt by customers there turning more cautious. LVMH joined the growing list late on Tuesday (Jul 23), reporting that sales in the region that includes China dropped 14 per cent in the second quarter.
Less money spent on European goods has severe implications for profits, as well as creating risks for share prices, company valuations, and even jobs. Swatch Group, for example, saw China sales plunge 30 per cent in the first half and is cutting production.
Executives may hope this is a short-term blip, but it’s not clear how China turns things around. It’s dealing with multiple problems, from a deepening property crisis to faltering consumer spending and rising trade tensions.
Goldman Sachs strategists are recommending that investors sell European stocks that derive the bulk of their sales from China.
“We are concerned about the exposure to China,” said Arun Sai, senior multi-asset strategist at Pictet Asset Management. “Profit warnings from European companies again this earnings season have already flagged the risk of weaker-than-anticipated demand from China, especially the consumer.”
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In the near term, the impact of China’s downturn has already trickled through into earnings, boding ill as the reporting season heads towards its peak in the days and weeks ahead.
Luxury brands in particular pinned their fortunes on the lucrative Chinese market in recent years, but the slowdown is now putting them under pressure.
Shares in Hugo Boss and Burberry were among those to suffer last week as the two fashion groups issued profit warnings. German carmaker Porsche slumped on Tuesday after a supply shortage added to the pressure from the slowing sales in China.
And industrial goods manufacturers are also in focus after ABB blamed a double-digit drop in Chinese orders for its poor quarter.
A Goldman Sachs basket of European stocks with high sales exposure to China has underperformed the broader market this year. Strategists including Lilia Peytavin advises selling such stocks in favour of those more reliant on US sales.
Chinese authorities did announce some growth-friendly measures at their recent twice-in-a-decade Third Plenum, but they showed little urgency to boost demand or arrest the property slump. It means European companies that benefited during the country’s boom time are likely facing a continued slowdown in Chinese appetite for foreign goods and services.
Germany looks especially vulnerable, with UBS strategists estimating it accounts for half of the European Union’s exports to China.
Among individual companies, it highlighted miners BHP Group and Rio Tinto, bank Standard Chartered and car maker Volkswagen as firms that earn more than 40 per cent of their revenue from the country.
“China’s domestic weakness has been a multi-year drag but was overshadowed by strength in the US,” strategists led by Gerry Fowler said. “Now that both regions appear to be slowing, the nascent European recovery is vulnerable, again, to external forces.”
Swatch, the maker of Omega, Blancpain and Tissot watches, is responding to the drop in China demand by lowering production by between 20 per cent and 30 per cent. It’s also cutting costs but is not reducing its workers in Switzerland in a significant way.
Chief executive officer Nick Hayek said the company wants to be ready to ramp up production when China demand recovers, though he does not expect a significant turnaround this year.
Investor nervousness around tariffs has also hit semiconductor equipment maker ASML Holding, Europe’s third-largest company by market value.
Reliant on China for almost half its sales, ASML saw its stock tumble 17 per cent last week on concern the US could slap fresh curbs on companies that supply Beijing with advanced chip technology.
Finally, China is a problem for some European manufacturers as it emerges as a competitor, threatening profits in a range of sectors, from semiconductors to chemicals.
That rivalry is also playing out in the form of tariffs, with the EU imposing temporary duties on electric vehicles (EVs) made in China. The uncertainty is already affecting earnings: Sweden’s Volvo Car has trimmed its auto sales forecast for this year, given its EVs are made in China.
As the earnings season continues, “people will be looking particularly at guidance from the more export-sensitive European names, just looking for any signs of how they are seeing both the impact of China as an end market, but also as a competitor”, said Sunil Krishnan, head of multi-asset funds at Aviva Investors. “That is going to be an important theme.” BLOOMBERG
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