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Business
Print Edition> Business
UPDATED: July 14, 2014 NO. 29 July 17, 2014
Market Watch No. 29, 2014
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OPINION

Fortune Favors the Valuable

The latest Fortune Global 500 list was just released. What's encouraging is that the profits of this year's top 500 companies totaled $1.96 trillion, a rise of 27 percent compared with last year, indicating that multinationals, the barometer of the global economy, are riding out the financial crisis. Meanwhile, China, the world's second largest economy, saw 100 companies entering the list, 91 of which come from the mainland, marking the 11th year straight that the number of Chinese Global 500 companies has increased.

In contrast, from 2002 to 2012, the United States saw the number of its companies on the list dwindle. This year, a total of 132 U.S. companies are included, four less than that in 2013. Furthermore, Sinopec Group has replaced Exxon Mobil to become one of three largest multinationals worldwide, bringing an end to the Western monopolization of the top three spots previously occupied by Walmart, Shell and Exxon Mobil.

China's increase and the U.S. decrease in the number of Global 500 companies indicate an irreversible momentum in China's efforts to catch up in economic strength. While China has secured the No.2 place in the number of companies on the Fortune Global 500 list, continuous expansion in sales revenue can never prop up its attempt to become a real economic power.

While there is no denying that Chinese enterprises have made stupendous progress in the past few years, they are still lagging far behind their American counterparts with regard to some specific indicators. For instance, the average profit of American companies on the list stands at $6.24 billion, twice that of Chinese companies, but the number of employees taken on by Chinese companies is 50 percent higher than those hired stateside. Chinese companies on the list still have a long way to go in catching up with U.S. companies in terms of profit per capita.

Take Lenovo and Apple for example. Lenovo is ranked 286th this year, representing a great stride from 329th place in 2013, and its sales revenue has reached $38.7 billion. Apple took 17th place with sales revenue of $170.9 billion. While Lenovo's sales revenue accounts for 22.6 percent of that of its American competitor, its $800-million annual profit is a drop in the ocean compared with the colossal $37 billion registered by Apple.

The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China has consistently snatched the top spot for being the largest bank in the world by total assets and it posted a profit of $42.7 billion in 2013. However, the country's most profitable bank primarily lives on the interest rate margins between deposits and loans. The bank earned a pre-tax profit of $2.23 billion in the overseas market last year, dwarfed by its American and European counterparts, most of whom glean roughly 40 percent of their total profits from overseas business.

Among the 91 listed Chinese mainland companies, 11 are engaged in the coal industry, and if thermal power companies are counted, this number rises to 16. Despite the important role they have played in China's economic rise, these companies are of no strategic importance in regard to their limited gains in the global value chain. A similar case in point is Chinese carmakers, which are still original equipment manufacturers, although they often appear on the Fortune Global 500 list.

The only strategically valuable Chinese company worthy of mention is Huawei, a Shenzhen-headquartered networking and telecommunications equipment and services company. Since its establishment in 1987, Huawei has set a good example for others to follow. In 2013, its revenue hit $38.8 billion, 65 percent of which was generated by its overseas business, with revenue from European countries totaling $5.23 billion. Last year, the company invested 30.7 billion yuan ($4.92 billion) in research and development, accounting for 12.8 percent of its sales revenue, reaching the level of leading international scientific and technical corporations.

Despite an increased presence on the Fortune Global 500 list, China should reflect on its unsustainable growth model and the lack of international competitiveness of its companies. The sheer size of companies and their global rankings can't accurately measure a country's international competitiveness. As a manufacturing giant, China should focus on the ferocious challenges awaiting its companies in the global division of financial resources, the cultivation of strategic industries, and the pricing and creative design of products.

To become a real economic power, China should foster 100 conglomerates capable of deploying resources globally, rather than expanding their corporate revenue. Without gaining a say in the global financial value chain and improving competitiveness, the companies' market value will not ascend, even if more of them nudge onto the list.

This is edited excerpt from an article by Zhang Yugui, Dean of School of Economics and Finance, Shanghai International Studies University, published in Shanghai Securities News

NUMBERS

100

The number of upcoming initial public offerings to take place in China from June to December this year, announced by China Securities Regulatory Commission

784

The number of mergers and acquisitions in the Chinese market in the first half of 2014

$1.37 bln

Trade between the Chinese mainland and Macao in the first five months, down by 11.2 percent year on year

$76.29 bln

Trade between the Chinese mainland and Taiwan in the first five months, down 12.2 percent from the same period in 2013

268,666 units

Sales of German car producer Audi AG in the Chinese market in the first half of 2014

615.3 bln yuan

The predicted transaction volume of the domestic online clothing market in 2014, according to China E-Commerce Research Center

QUOTE

"Ever since lending and borrowing and commercial activities first emerged, credit has always been an essential factor. Currently, China still needs to continuously strengthen its credit system."

Cheng Siwei, a renowned economist, speaking at the Second China SME Investment & Financing Expo

Email us at: yushujun@bjreview.com



 
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