Trade wars: We're next, European investors fear

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
LONDON: While global markets would hail a US-China trade deal, fears are growing that the European Union could be the fall guy in any
breakthrough, which would allow Donald Trump to turn his attention to German cars or French luxury wines. Investors thinking of chasing a
rally on a trade accord through European trade proxies, such as Germany's export-heavy DAX index or the continent's luxury names, should
probably think twice, analysts believe. For trouble could come in a lot of different forms
Alicia Garcia-Herrero, Chief Economist at Natixis for Asia Pacific, and a researcher at the Bruegel think-tank, is among those who have
warned that a deal "could cost Europe dearly" if China substitutes a large part of its European imports for US goods in a bid to appease the
Trump administration
There is a lot at stake
European-listed firms expect 456 billion euros ($521 billion) in total revenue from China in 2019, with luxury brands and automakers the
most exposed sectors, a Refinitiv analysis of company data shows. Vincent Deluard, global macro strategist at INTL FCStone, said that in the
case China and the United States fail to clinch a deal, Europe could be flooded with cheap Chinese goods
"Europe stands to lose the most when the truce expires on March 1st as China would surely dump billions of discounted goods on the old
continent," Deluard wrote
In 2017, China exported goods worth 374 billion euros to the EU and 505 billion dollars to the United States
Another dire scenario sketched out by Deluard would be a bitter lose-lose for Europe and arguable win-win for Trump: "Imposing tariffs on
European cars and reaching a deal with China could allow the Trump administration to claim two victories at the same time"
Many investors fear the immediate relief of a China-US deal could be swiftly followed by a bitter confrontation between the EU and its
closest ally
"WE ARE NEXT" While Germany takes the lion's share of the EU's trade surplus with the United States, over 63 billion dollars in 2017, other
European countries such as Ireland, Italy or France have a lot to lose if tariffs are imposed on European goods
The diversity of their exports highlights how wide the impact would be
A graphic from the Atlas of Economic Complexity, Center for International Development at Harvard University, shows how French exports in
2016 ranged from wines (3.80 percent) to gas turbines (10.95 percent) and medicines (6.08 percent)
Analysts trying to decipher the US president's strategy believe that a confrontation with the EU is a probable next step following the
revamping of the North American Free Trade Agreement and his current efforts to slash the US trade deficit with China from a record 375
billion dollars in 2017
"We are next in the queue," warns BNP Paribas' chief economist William De Vijlder, adding that "the subject of the EU-US trade negotiations
has been under the radar up to recently but could resurface soon." Lombard Odier strategist Charles St-Arnaud believes a period of prolonged
EU-US tension, with daily incendiary headlines making European markets jittery, is a distinct possibility. "What Trump tweeted about French
wine, I can see the parallel with Canadian milk," he said recalling the tense US NAFTA negotiations with Canada
On Nov
13th, Trump complained that while France could easily export wines to the United States, US winemakers' access to the French market was
restricted
"Not fair, must change", he said on Twitter. St-Arnaud argues that the threat of a trade war with the United States could mean another grim
year for European stocks, which have already suffered collateral damage from the trade spat between the world's two biggest economies
"A European underperformance is possible in 2019," he believes. If the Chinese negotiating team currently in Washington was to achieve
significant progress, European stocks would get a boost, at least in the short-term
"It is crucial for the world economy that this man-made uncertainty ceases," said De Vijlder
An escalation would meanwhile sharpen the global growth downturn and hit bourses worldwide, according to a big Reuters poll of
economists. But while both emerging and European stock markets underperformed Wall Street during 2018 due to the trade stress endured by
exporters, European shares remain very much less loved by global investors than their EM peers. According to data provider EPFR, while
emerging markets equity funds have recorded 15 straight weeks of inflows, European funds saw outflows for 45 of the past 46 weeks
"TAKE THE WIND OUT TRUMP'S SAIL" With a concerns about Brexit, unrest in France, Italy's populist government and May's EU elections, the
big European benchmarks are seen by many foreign investors as "uninvestable", especially as growth slows. "It's pretty clear that during the
course of conversation with any client, political risk premium, political uncertainty will come into the conversation," said Andrew
Milligan, head of strategy at Aberdeen Investments
Joerg Kraemer, Commerzbank's chief economist, said a confrontation with Washington could be very damaging, notably for the German car
industry and that the European Commission would be wise to make a pre-emptive move
"Europe needs to take the wind out Trump's sails and move first," he told Reuters, calling for the EU to scrap its 10 percent tariff on US
cars to defuse tensions.