Three quarters of the 160-plus American invested companies in
south China's Guangdong Province that were recently surveyed
show they are starting to make profits.
The announcement was made by Harley Seyedin, president of the
American Chamber of Commerce in Guangdong who is also vice chairman
of the council for Asian-Pacific operation with the American
Chamber of Commerce.
The survey respondents answered questions concerning business
environment, investment plans and profit making. It was conducted
by Hewitt Associates.
According to the survey, 16 percent of the companies surveyed
have been operating business in China for less than five years,
while eight percent of the companies were in China less than two
years.
Of the companies still operating in the red, eight percent
predict they will start making profits next year, four percent
forecast that they will make profits in three to five years. Only
two percent of those surveyed predict they will take a longer time
to start making profits.
A number of American invested firms have extended their scope of
business from the conventional fields of manufacturing and trade to
professional and commercial services.
The vast Chinese market and cheaper labor are two prominent
factors that have attracted Americans to invest in China, the
survey shows.
Nearly 38 percent of the companies surveyed each have global
revenue of US$500 million, of which, about one third is contributed
by their China-based business operations.
Almost all firms surveyed say the business environment for
overseas investors has kept improving in the recent years, with two
thirds describing the reform measures as effective.
The survey also shows that two thirds of the respondents
invested US$10 million to expand their business last year and 60
percent said they will invest US$10 million this year in a bid to
gain greater market share in China.
(Xinhua News Agency April 8, 2006)