Ottawa Citizen

China’s computer hacking won’t stop U.S. business there.

Trade deals are too lucrative to stop because of recent theft allegation­s

- PAUL WISEMAN

China may be trying to steal trade secrets from U.S. businesses, as federal prosecutor­s allege. Yet for many U.S. companies, China’s vast market remains an irresistib­le source of business.

The Justice Department’s indictment last week of five Chinese military officials accused them of trying to pilfer confidenti­al informatio­n from American companies. But even some of the alleged U.S. corporate victims of the hackers have little incentive to cheer any trade rupture with China.

One, Westinghou­se, is building four nuclear reactors in China.

Another, specialty steelmaker Allegheny Technologi­es, operates a joint venture in Shanghai.

A third, Alcoa, is the biggest foreign investor in China’s aluminum market. Indeed, Alcoa went so far as to downplay Justice’s charges: “No material informatio­n was compromise­d during this incident which occurred several years ago,” the company said.

American companies are in a delicate position. They want to maintain good relations with China, the world’s second-biggest economy and a market where U.S. firms’ earnings grew nearly 50 per cent last year. But they’re also increasing­ly fearful of Chinese hackers stealing their trade secrets.

Looked at that way, the hacking case is “going to be positive in opening up the conversati­on,” said Jamian Ronca Spadavecch­ia, founder of the Oxbow Advisory, which advises companies about risks in China and other emerging markets. “It’s bringing into the open some of the issues U.S. companies are facing.”

A U.S.-China Business Council survey has found that cybersecur­ity is a growing threat for U.S. companies in China: It jumped from to No. 14 last year from No. 23 in 2012 on a list of gripes about the Chinese market. American companies are also increasing­ly irritated by China’s attempts to censor the Internet, according to a survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in China.

The confrontat­ion over hacking — China rejects the charges as based on “fabricated facts” — highlights the often-awkward relationsh­ip between China and the United States. They’re frenemies in a globalized world — rivals and partners in both politics and economics.

U.S. companies complain that China is becoming less hospitable to foreign companies.

They cite policies that give Chinese firms an edge over foreign competitor­s, cumbersome licensing requiremen­ts and endless struggles to protect their intellectu­al property — from software to music to clothing design — from theft.

For all the complaints and tensions, U.S.-China business ties are tight and getting tighter.

Last week, even as the hacking controvers­y raged, former U.S. ambassador­s to Beijing rang the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange to mark the 35th anniversar­y of U.S.-China diplomatic relations. After all, 77 Chinese company stocks now trade on the NYSE. Another big one — e-commerce giant Alibaba — plans to list its stock in the United States, either on the NYSE or NASDAQ.

Trade in goods between the U.S. and China last year hit a record $562 billion U.S. American companies earned nearly $10 billion last year in China, another record. American direct investment in China exceeds $50 billion.

General Motors sells more cars in China than in the United States. General Electric sells China clean power plants that run on methane. Wal-Mart has 390 stores across China. Starbucks runs hundreds of cafés in China.

In a big turnabout, Chinese companies have begun to invest in America, too. Chinese investment in the United States reached $14 billion last year, up from virtually nothing a decade ago.

About 70,000 Americans work for Chinese companies, according to the Rhodium Group consultanc­y. Chinese firms are being drawn to America by cheap energy and land and by U.S. wages that aren’t as high compared with China’s as they once were.

Sometimes frictions between two countries can encourage closer ties. U.S.-Japan trade battles, for example, led Japanese automakers to build plants in America in the 1980s and 1990s. China’s Tianjin Pipe is building a $1-billion U.S. factory in Gregory, Tex.— a decision it made after the U.S. imposed sanctions on pipes made in China.

“The investment will continue” unless the U.S.-China disputes get much worse, said Raymond Cheng, CEO of the Sozo Group, a Hong Kong firm that helps Chinese companies invest in America.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this 2007 photo, Stephen Tritch, then CEO of Westinghou­se, left, shakes on a nuclear power plant deal with Wang Binghua of the State Nuclear Power Technology Corp. of China.
NG HAN GUAN/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this 2007 photo, Stephen Tritch, then CEO of Westinghou­se, left, shakes on a nuclear power plant deal with Wang Binghua of the State Nuclear Power Technology Corp. of China.

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