Logo of AHK Greater China

Flash Survey May 2025: Business Confidence Hit by Trade Conflict, Yet Investment Strategies Stay Strong

  • News

Published on May 7, 2025

Flash Survey 202505.png

The survey results reveal that the trade conflict creates hurdles for German companies, mainly due to the impact of U.S. and Chinese tariffs. A notable decline in the economic outlook among German businesses in China is evident, with expectations for industry development continuing at a low level. Despite this, investment strategies remain strong. Half of the companies plan to increase their investments, and more than one-third accelerate their localization efforts in China as a strategic response to the ongoing trade tensions. Meanwhile, companies seek a stronger emphasis from the new German government on active and informed engagement with China to support their business.

 

Key Findings:

  • Tariffs have the largest impact among all trade instruments: German companies are most affected by tariffs, with 76% citing U.S. tariffs and 63% mentioning Chinese tariffs. U.S. export controls rank third (43%), followed by U.S. anti-sanctions legislation with 39%.
  • More impact from U.S. trade measures: 75% of companies are affected by the latest trade measures from the U.S. toward China, while 57% report seeing an impact from Chinese measures against the U.S.
  • Accelerated localization as a response to trade conflict: 38% of German companies are accelerating their localization plans in China as one of their main responses to the trade conflict. Almost half (48%) are taking a wait-and-see approach and want to continue observing the situation.
  • Outlook for China's economy is fading amid trade conflict: Over half (56%) of German companies predict a decline in economic conditions over the next six months, a substantial increase of 40 percentage points when asked the same question last year in May 2024. Meanwhile, only 15% expect an improvement, and 30% foresee no significant changes.
  • Industry development continues to lag: Although showing improvement compared to last year, 44% still expect a decline in industry development for 2025. Meanwhile, 19% foresee improving conditions (September last year 15%), while 37% expect the situation to remain unchanged.
  • Turnover and profit expectations muted: Only 29% expect an increase in turnover by the end of 2025, 4 percentage points less than in September last year. Moreover, expectations for profit increase have declined from 22% to 18%.
  • Nonetheless, investment intentions remain solid: 50% of respondents intend to increase their investment in the next two years, showing a stable trend compared with 51% in September last year. Meanwhile, 18% of companies plan to decrease their investment, up 4 percentage points.
  • Companies call for a more hands-on approach toward China: Two-thirds (66%) of companies want the new German government to promote an active and informed engagement with China as a way to support their business. Additionally, 52% believe improving China’s image in Germany would strengthen operations, while 40% see early government visits as key support.

Read the latest news

See all News
  • internship-education-dual-system-training-trip-partnership-innovation-transformation-digital-sme-equipment-Germany-sustainability-youth-exchanges.png
    News

    From Lübeck to Beijing: How German interns catalyze Sino-German economic collaboration

    Through the China‑Germany Youth Interns Exchange Programme (CGYIEP), Hanse-School has worked with AHK Greater China’s German Internship Program to place German vocational students in three‑ to four‑week, career‑aligned internships at Chinese companies and institutions, the talents familiar with German business practices supported the Chinese companies with their knowledge and skills.

  • 05efdb05-0a06-458d-a92a-26b0826691b8.png
    News

    China up close: How German SMEs connect with China’s industrial and innovation backbone

    In January 2026, a delegation of German Mittelstand companies led by Markus Schmidt of Alois Müller Group and organized by AHK Greater China completed a week-long tour and visited manufacturers, tech labs and startups to gain direct insight into China’s industrial and innovation ecosystem. The trip confirmed the importance of firsthand experience, trusted local partners and open dialogue, strengthened cross‑border ties.

  • New Board of Directors - German Chamber of Commerce in China - North China, Term 2026 - 2028
    News

    New Board of Directors - German Chamber of Commerce in China - North China, Term 2026 - 2028

    During the Annual General Meeting on May 19, 2026, the new Board for the term 2026-2028 was elected and announced.

Searching for something else?

In our information centre, you can find the latest news, downloads, videos, podcasts...

Go to Info Hub