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Asian firms' sentiment bounces from low but recession fears grow: Thomson Reuters/INSEAD

Published 09/17/2019, 11:09 PM
Updated 09/17/2019, 11:11 PM
© Reuters.  Asian firms' sentiment bounces from low but recession fears grow: Thomson Reuters/INSEAD

© Reuters. Asian firms' sentiment bounces from low but recession fears grow: Thomson Reuters/INSEAD

By Tom Westbrook

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Confidence among companies in Asia lifted slightly in the September quarter from 10-year lows, but most firms do not plan on hiring or expect business to pick up as they see a risk of a global recession looming, a Thomson Reuters/INSEAD survey found.

The Thomson Reuters/INSEAD Asian Business Sentiment Index tracking firms' six-month outlook rose five points to 58 in the survey.

A reading above 50 means optimistic respondents outnumbered pessimists.

The latest showing, though, means the index has not risen above the mid-60s for a year and is one of the seven weakest readings since the 2008-2009 global financial crisis.

"We are in a state of almost permanent uncertainty, which is not leading yet to a crisis but I think at some point we are going to see the cost of it," said Antonio Fatas, a Singapore-based economics professor at global business school INSEAD.

"Some investments are going to be postponed, some investments are going to be stopped and little by little the engine of growth is going to slow down."

Respondents rated a global recession as the top risk, overhauling trade-war fears which had topped the table for the previous six quarters.

A total of 102 companies from a range of sectors responded to the survey, conducted in 11 Asia-Pacific countries where 45% of the world's population lives and almost a third of global gross domestic product is generated.

Participants included firms from automaking to technology such as Canon Inc (T:7751), SoftBank Group Corp (T:9984) and Hero MotoCorp Ltd (NS:HROM).

WAIT AND SEE

The survey was conducted from Aug. 30 to Sept. 13, as global markets rallied on signs of a thaw in U.S.-China trade tensions.

The trade war has also proven a boon for some, as businesses relocate from China to Southeast Asia and elsewhere to avoid tariffs.

However, cool responses on hiring plans and the sales outlook suggest that any optimism is muted, and unlikely to be solid enough to drive investment and spending.

More than two-thirds of respondents plan on cutting staff or at best holding numbers steady in the next six months. Only 39% expect their sales volumes to rise.

"It's about not over-committing on expansion plans...it's about being prudent," said Suresh Sidhu, chief executive officer of edotco Group, a telecoms infrastructure firm headquartered in Kuala Lumpur, with business across south and southeast Asia.

"I don't see people stopping, I just see people thinking about stopping. We definitely have not scaled up very aggressive plans...in times of great complexity and unpredictability, people generally don't spend."

Economic indicators also suggest a gloomy outlook.

Rising global protectionism could shave 0.8% from the world's economic output next year, the International Monetary Fund said last week.

Flagging demand has already flayed Asian firms such as Samsung Electronics Co Ltd (KS:005930), whose profit halved for the June quarter, and automakers from Japan's Mazda Motor Corp (T:7261) to India's Tata Motors Ltd (NS:TAMO).

And data released this month showed China's economic woes deepened in August, with growth in industrial production at its weakest in more than 17 years, while U.S manufacturing also shrank.

Alvin Liew, senior economist at Singapore's United Overseas Bank, said the trade war is the biggest driver of the slowdown that will probably deepen unless a breakthrough in negotiations can recharge business confidence and investment.

"I don't think anybody has the kind of delusion that both countries will come to a full-scale agreement and the world will turn into a better place after that," he said.

"But there's still some hope holding out and some optimism that they could do an interim trade deal...something to put some certainty back," Liew said. "At the end of the day both sides know that this is not good overall."

Note: Companies surveyed can change from quarter to quarter.

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