Views on China | Boeing’s biggest China concern isn’t a Trump trade war

As if it wasn’t bad enough getting into a fight with the president-elect over the cost of Air Force One, Boeing Co. is facing problems from the other side of the Pacific.

Beijing is planning to step up scrutiny of U.S. companies in the event that Donald Trump flips from trash-talking the cost of presidential aircraft to taking punitive measures against Chinese exports to the U.S., people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg News Friday.

That’s particularly bad news for Boeing because its Chinese business is unusually vulnerable to retaliatory action from the government. The measures could include scaling back government purchases or alternatively, investigations by tax, antitrust or anti-dumping authorities, the people said.

Just eight U.S. companies earned more than USD5 billion in revenue from China in their last fiscal year. Five of them are semiconductor and electronics companies whose products are central to China’s high-tech manufacturing ambitions. One – Apple Inc. – is a consumer business whose demand is driven by public taste rather than government fiat, while Yum! Brands Inc. has already spun off its China arm into a separate business.

Boeing is in a different (flying) boat. Its biggest customers in the country – Air China Ltd., China Eastern Airlines Corp., and China Southern Airlines Co. – are all state-controlled. Even private carriers such as Hainan Airlines Co. know better than to go against the will of the government by ordering aircraft from a company in Beijing’s bad books, especially when Airbus SE is offering comparable aircraft.

There’s a catch, though. While Boeing counts highly in the ranks of Chinese revenue earned by U.S. businesses, China isn’t such an important part of the planemaker’s order book. The 292 undelivered aircraft ordered by Chinese airlines and lessors make up just 5.5 percent of Boeing’s total outstanding orders – and just 4.4 percent of the total at Airbus.

India’s SpiceJet Ltd. is close to finalizing an order for 92 Boeing 737s, people familiar with the matter told Anurag Kotoky and Julie Johnsson of Bloomberg News Friday, about a third the size of China Inc.’s entire outstanding order book.

Looked at in those terms, China’s aviation sector is only a bit more important to Boeing than its biggest customers Southwest Airlines Co. and Ryanair Holdings Plc, and significantly less important to Airbus than InterGlobe Aviation Ltd., known as IndiGo, and AirAsia Bhd.

That’s somewhat cold comfort. China’s domestic aviation market will still be the world’s biggest within 20 years, according to Boeing’s 2016-2035 market outlook, outstripping North America and Europe.

The relatively slender nature of Chinese carriers’ order books doesn’t mean there’s no demand pending. Rather, it’s a sign that the country’s airlines are holding fire until Commercial Aircraft Corp. of China Ltd., or Comac, starts producing its C919 in competition with the 737 and A320 in a few years.

In that sense, the trade war Boeing needs to fear isn’t just around the corner. It’s already begun. David Fickling, Bloomberg

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