European Firms Find China Easier to Operate in, Says Survey
By Reuters | 26 May, 2026
After several years of decline in sentiment the 2026 annual survey by the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China found fewer respondents complaining that doing business in China had become more difficult.
Sentiment among European companies in China may be nearing an inflection point after several years of decline, although significant challenges remain, the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China said on Wednesday.
For the first time in five years, the chamber's annual survey for 2026 showed fewer respondents said doing business in China had become more difficult over the previous year. The share fell to 68%, down 5 percentage points year-on-year.
"We should keep in mind that last year was the worst year we had on our record in terms of business confidence and that we are coming out of a period where we had five consecutive years of deteriorating business sentiment," said Jens Eskelund, President of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China.
Still, Eskelund said China had performed "comparatively" well compared with other markets hit by volatility, with some European companies managing to restore profitability. Many European firms also see China as an important location for innovation.
The survey found that 17% of respondents said they were optimistic about their two-year profitability outlook, up 5 percentage points year-on-year.
However, the survey makes clear that the rebound in confidence remains fragile. European companies operating in the country continue to face significant headwinds from China's economic slowdown, weak domestic demand and intense price competition in some sectors, often described in China as "involution".
The Chamber called on China to make processes for securing licenses under its export-control regime more transparent, describing this as one of several practical, near-term reforms — or "low-hanging fruit" — that could help build momentum for a recovery in business confidence among European companies in the country.
According to the survey, 32% of respondents said they or partners in their supply chain had been affected by Chinese export controls.
(Reporting by Ju-min Park; Editing by Ronojoy Mazumdar)
Recent Articles
- Nvidia Has Begun Shipping H200 AI Chips to China
- IBM Warns AI Boom Is Squeezing Software Budgets; Sending Shares Down
- Two Utah National Monuments Fall to Trump Anti-Green Drive
- 72% of Americans Disagree with Trump on Refugees
- June CPI Not As Hot As Feared, Soothing Markets
- CXMT IPO Puts It on Trajectory toward Global DRAM Leaders
- China's June Trade Tops Forecasts Buoyed by AI Boom
- China Purges 3rd Politburo Member in Deepening Anti-Graft Drive
- Nvidia Halves Asia AI Chip Customer List
- Chetan Nayak Fails to Quell Skeptics Even with Majorana 2 Quantum Chip
