(WSJ) China’s isolation amid the coronavirus outbreak, a rare freeze out for such a vital economic center, is rippling across the world.
Uncertainty over the virus—which has infected more than 14,500 people—
has disrupted worldwide trade and supply chains, depressed asset
prices, and forced multinational businesses to make hard decisions with
limited information.
The U.S., and governments in Europe and Asia are enforcing new regulations to block visitors from China
and screen returning U.S. citizens, while major airlines suspended
flights to the country and companies pulled out expatriate executives.
“The calls that I get are: ‘We don’t know what to do. Our employees
are panicking,’” says Rachel Conn, an employment attorney in San
Francisco at Nixon Peabody LLP. “They’ve never dealt with a situation
like this.”
Apple Inc. said this weekend it will close all of its stores and
corporate offices in China through Feb. 9. The company, which employs
10,000 people in China, is also contending with work stoppages by
factories that produce components for the products it sells around the
world.
China’s health crisis is testing the entire global economic system, and placing unexpected and additional strain on the fragility of an extended boom. It’s also a test of China’s strength as a consumer—and the U.S.’s ability to step up as China lags.
Levi Strauss
& Co., which in October opened its biggest China store in the
city of Wuhan, the center of the outbreak, is among the international
brands that together have closed thousands of outlets around the
country, including
McDonald’s Corp.
and
Starbucks Inc.,
in part to comply with government requests for people to remain off the streets.
Chinese factories that were supposed to be quiet for a few days to
celebrate Lunar New Year are looking at possible closures and staff
disruptions of weeks if not more, threatening production plans at Apple,
as well as
Tesla Inc.
and
Anheuser-Busch InBev SA.
Sagging demand for crude oil, which has stumbled 16% in price since
China identified the coronavirus, is prompting Saudi Arabia, the de
facto leader of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries,
to push other members to convene an emergency meeting Wednesday, OPEC
officials said.
China is the world’s biggest oil importer and the locked-down city of Wuhan, where the virus emerged, is one of its key oil and gas hubs. Two big Saudi customers, China National Chemical Corp. and
Hengli Petrochemical
—with refinery capacity of almost 1 million barrels a day—are
reducing their purchases, according to an oil trader and a Persian Gulf
oil official.
Beijing-based energy consultancy JLC Network Technology Co. reported a 15% drop in refinery use over the past week alone.
Chinese markets dropped sharply
when they reopened Monday morning for the first time since Jan. 23,
after the extended New Year break. The benchmark Shanghai Composite
Index closed down 7.7%, its steepest one-day decline since August 2015.
The Shenzhen Composite fell 8.4%.
Coronavirus impact explained a lot of the 3.7% fall in the Dow Jones Industrial Average since it hit a record on Jan. 17, wiping out this year’s gains.
Pharmaceutical giants, financial institutions and technology
multinationals are starting to evacuate their expatriate workforces from
throughout China, according to Tammy Krings, chief executive of ATG
Travel Worldwide who has dealt with “short and predictable” past natural
disasters and terrorism scares. “This is just growing,” she said.
Other companies are relocating staffers from China for three to six
months. Some families are going so far as to seek new schools for their
children – meaning they may be gone for good.
Boston Consulting Group has asked its staff in China to spend an
extra week working at home after the holidays end and deferred all
travel to mainland China for the next three weeks, according to a person
familiar with the matter.
In a dramatic move, air carriers including
American Airlines Group Inc.,
Delta Air Lines Inc.
and
United Airlines Holdings Inc.
on Friday temporarily suspended flight service to China,
as tourists canceled travel plans and crews balked at flying. Singapore
said it will ban many visitors from China, while pressure builds on
Hong Kong to seal its border with the mainland.
Since the virus first emerged in Wuhan, the biggest city in central
China, in late December, it has killed more than 300 people, primarily
in mainland China. The first—and so far only—death outside China was
reported in the Philippines this weekend when the disease killed a
44-year-old Chinese man from Wuhan. So far, there are about 140 cases in
20 or so countries outside mainland China, including eight in the U.S.
Many global companies are taking their cues from the World Health
Organization, which last week declared the outbreak a public health
emergency and said that many unknowns include severity, transmission and
treatment of the novel coronavirus.
The virus appears to be less deadly than SARS,
which killed about 10% of the people who caught it. So far, about 2% of
the people infected with the new coronavirus have died. It’s also much
harder to transmit than the measles.
China’s government reacted angrily to border restrictions and airline
cancellations. “This kind of overreaction could only make things even
worse,” China’s Foreign Ministry on Saturday wrote on its
Twitter
account. “It’s not the right way to deal with the pandemic.”
Speaking separately on Saturday as China’s central bank and other
agencies pledged support to the economy, a vice chairman of the China
Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission pointed to solid economic
fundamentals in the country and predicted any market weakness will
probably be “short-lived and temporary.”
A decade and a half ago, when the severe acute respiratory syndrome outbreak known as SARS rattled the world,
China accounted for a relatively small part of the global economy.
Today, it’s responsible for almost a fifth of global gross domestic
product when adjusted for incomes – more than the U.S.’s 15% by the same
measure, adding a morbid twist to the economic adage that when America
sneezes, the world catches a cold.
China’s heavily-indebted economy has long been slowing.
More recently, economists were rushing to boost predictions for Chinese
growth this year on relief that Washington and Beijing had called a
truce to their two-year trade war. Now the picture is changing rapidly
as Chinese industrial activity and consumer spending slow.
Ten economists surveyed on Friday by The Wall Street Journal lowered
their expectations for first quarter Chinese growth by over a percentage
point to a median 4.9%. Those forecast cuts were made hours before the
U.S. airline announcements.
A likely fall in arrivals to the U.S. by Chinese—the globe’s
biggest-spending travelers—is one factor that could now dent first
quarter U.S. growth, economists said Friday.
The virus probably doesn’t pose a serious threat to the U.S’s
decade-long expansion yet, they said. But that could change if the virus
isn’t contained soon, or spreads more widely.
Goldman Sachs
on Friday said it expects the virus to reduce U.S. output by 0.4
percentage point to 0.5 percentage point, at an annual rate, in the
first quarter, with growth rebounding in the second quarter, leaving
minimal impact on full-year growth. Goldman projects U.S. output will
expand 1.7%, at an annual rate, in January through March. Still, with
news moving so quickly, no one really knows.
“It could be a few minimal tenths of a percent, or it could be up or
near a full percent depending on the depth and duration of the actual
exposure,” said
Lindsey Piegza,
an economist at Stifel Nicolaus & Co. in New York.
The shock waves began Jan. 23, when Chinese President
Xi Jinping
ordered an indefinite transportation blockade around central
Hubei province, an unconventional strategy to stop a virus originating
in the province’s capital, Wuhan. The lockdown covers a region of about
60 million, while other regulations nationwide are aimed at keeping
people home.
Parts of the world are effectively seeking to quarantine China. On
Friday, the U.S. government said non-Americans who had visited China
will be quarantined 14 days upon arrival, in line with a WHO warning
that the virus can linger undetected that long. The same applies to U.S.
citizens who traveled in Hubei.
Several chief executive letters to employees reviewed by The Wall
Street Journal echoed the WHO concern by ordering travel restrictions to
China. Consulting firms Ernst & Young and KPMG both went a step
further saying employees should stay home for several weeks after
traveling to China.
The cutoff of flight service to China, by carriers from the U.K. to
Singapore and Australia, appears unprecedented during peacetime—and
possibly lengthy since Chinese health officials warn virus cases are
still rising. A halt in 2010 to air travel over much of Europe after an
eruption of Iceland’s Eyjafjallajökull volcano lasted six days. Planes
were back in American skies three days after the 2001 terrorist attacks,
including over New York.
Forecasting the costs of the crisis is impossible. Last year, the WHO
said in a report that it had tracked 1,483 epidemic events in 172
countries between 2011 and 2018. The most expensive in recent history
include $40 billion in lost productivity due to SARS in 2003 and up to
$55 billion during a 2009 H1N1 swine flu pandemic, both of which
involved China. The WHO said an outbreak of Ebola in West Africa from
2014 to 2016 cost $53 billion in economic and social impacts.
When SARS hit, China’s economy was on an upswing, with swelling
numbers of outbound travelers and fast-growing trade, but it was only
the sixth biggest economy, whereas today it’s No. 2 in GDP and No. 1 in
world trade. Only about 7 million ventured beyond Hong Kong in 2002,
according to Goldman Sachs figures; the government now counts around 150
million international trips annually. Seven of the busiest 10 container
ports are in China today, according to United Nations figures.
During SARS, most Chinese factories and schools remained open, and
the nation’s contribution to global GDP was under half its value today,
by the International Monetary Fund’s measure of purchasing power parity.
Some past disasters, including floods in Thailand in 2011 and the
earthquake and nuclear meltdown the same year in Fukushima, Japan,
resulted in long-lasting changes to supply chains, even after immediate
problems were fixed. Some international companies were already looking
to relocate out of China before the virus outbreak, as tensions between
Washington and Beijing have heated up in recent years and labor costs in
China have risen.
It’s uncertain when normal life will resume. Hundreds of millions of
Chinese are currently reluctant to leave their homes, wiping out a
traditionally important consumer boost during last month’s Lunar New
Year holiday. Fears are growing that companies already on the edge may
have trouble surviving, especially if workers don’t return, or the
government sets new delays to business and school resumption.
The twin hits to businesses and consumers promise to at least
temporarily reduce China’s appetite for imports, despite its trade-deal
pledge last month to boost by $200 billion purchases of U.S. goods and
services over the next two years.
Costco Wholesale Corp.,
which last year opened a Shanghai outlet with much fanfare, says
it could be three weeks before it can gauge any trade delays and import
appetite since ships are already in transit.
“There are concerns about disruptions and what level of disruption
and how long it is going to last,” said Costco’s chief financial
officer,
Richard Galanti.
“There are a lot of unknowns.”
One of the more bearish forecasts on China, from Chen Long of
Beijing-based research firm Plenum, calls for growth to plunge to 2% in
the current three months.
“The impact on the first quarter will be significant,” said Mr. Chen,
who bases his pessimism in part on an estimated 40% drop in Lunar New
Year spending from last year. Holiday-related train and plane ridership
was down 40% from the previous year, according to official data.
Chinese growth for 2020 as a whole was already widely forecast to
slow further from last year’s 6.1%, a three-decade low, with many
analysts, speaking after the trade deal, predicting about 6%. Now,
economists say those forecasts are optimistic.
Retail sales may now expand by only 3% to 4% in the first quarter
from the same period a year ago, compared with 8% year-on-year growth in
December, according to ING economist
Iris Pang.
Joblessness and inflation could jump. Hubei is one of six central
provinces that supply a third of the country’s migrant labor to other
parts of the country, and now many can’t travel.
Huang Yiping, a former Chinese central bank adviser, warns that if
just 5% of Chinese service-sector employees lose their jobs, that would
mean 20 million out of work. Higher consumer prices would exacerbate
already-elevated food inflation caused by a deadly swine fever, warns
Zhang Ming, a researcher at the state think-tank Chinese Academy of
Social Science. Adding to China’s food supply challenges was a case
reported on Sunday by its Ministry of Agriculture that an avian
influenza, H5N1, had appeared in chickens Hunan province, compounding
headaches for poultry producers near Wuhan who say transportation
bottlenecks are leaving them short of feed-grain.
Mitigating some of the damage to China’s economic figures is the fact
that the first quarter of the year is typically China’s least important
economically, since the Lunar New Year holidays perennially result in
factory shutdowns and slower trade.
Even with a disastrous first quarter, Plenum’s Mr. Chen says that if
the scare is short-lived, full-year growth could still hit 5.5%.
Furthermore, the coronavirus outbreak is primarily concentrated in
Hubei province, which has expanded quickly as manufacturers move inland
but is less than 4.5% of overall economic activity, and a similarly
slight share of international trade and investment.
Goldman Sachs, while acknowledging uncertainty about the length of
the epidemic, said that “past viral outbreaks have typically resulted in
short, sharp shocks to economic output,” lasting one to three months,
with a return to past levels of activity within two or three quarters.
That modeling, Goldman’s economists said, would lower China’s GDP growth
for the year to 5.5%, down from their previous 5.9% forecast, while a
more prolonged outbreak could mean a slump to 5% or lower.
After SARS, which took a heavy toll initially, China’s economy still
grew by 10% that year. The Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989 dragged
Chinese growth to 3.9% in 1990, though it was back to double-digit gains
within two years of that slowdown.
But those were periods when China’s economy typically grew much
faster, with fewer ties to the global economy. Wuhan and the surrounding
areas are vital parts of the global supply chain, and as long as they
are walled off, that threatens supply chains producing products from
automobiles to poultry.
Parts for iPhone maker Apple, including camera components, are made in Wuhan. .
“There are alternate sources, and we’re obviously working on
mitigation plans to make up any expected production loss,” said Apple
chief executive
Tim Cook,
who told investors Tuesday suppliers outside Wuhan were expected
to reopen their factories by Feb. 10.
Measuring the macroeconomic impact hinges a great deal on disease
control, and nobody knows when things will begin to return to normal.
“Things can turn positive over there just as quickly as they can turn negative,” according to
Patrick J. McHale,
chief executive officer of Minneapolis industrial products maker
Graco Inc.
Still, he said by email his hope to visit Graco operations near
Shanghai were upended Friday by the airline cancellations.
Yet another impact comes from the inevitable falloff in Chinese
travelers. They represent 7% of all tourists to the U.S. and their
spending is higher than any other foreign group at roughly $6,000 each
for airfare, hotels, restaurants and shopping, according to research
firm Tourism Economics. The firm expects 28% fewer Chinese visitors now,
reducing spending $5.8 billion, especially in California and New York.
“If you’re a hotelier in Los Angeles you’re going to feel this,” said the firm’s president, Adam Sacks.
Source: Wall Street Journal by James T. Areddy —Grace Zhu, Liyan Qi, Josh Mitchell, Chip Cutter, Patrick Thomas,
Sarah Nassauer, Benoit Faucon, Summer Said and Tripp Mickle contributed
to this article.
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