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Week 19 Wrap: European countries beam at China as Oz, US talk tough

ASX News
10 May 2024 16:09 (AEDT)

A ruffled EU flag sits up against a ruffled Chinese flag. Source: Adobe Stock

The biggest story of this week in my view hasn’t got much to do with Australian or US equities, and everything to do with forward-looking geopolitics.

If that isn’t your cup of tea, I apologise – jump straight ahead to the list of headlines that caught my attention this week.

But what’s happening with China-European relations is worth recapping this week.

Three weeks ago, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz indicated that his government had no real issues doing trade with China; that German-Chinese relations were sound, and that the two nations will continue to do trade.

Fast forward to this week, and France’s Emmanuel Macron said something similar, calling for a “reset” of ties with the largest Asian economy (and Australia’s largest trading partner.)

Notably, Macron invited Xi to a region of France near the Spanish border where Macron reportedly spent time as a child – a tip of the hat to 2023, when Jinping brought Macron to his father’s residence in Guangdong.

So, off the bat, we’ve seen evidence of a warming relationship between two of the largest EU economies in the last month; both Australian allies. But it isn’t just Germany and France.

Xi Jinping then went on to Serbia and Hungary – Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vučić has asked the Chinese leader to visit his nation dozens of times in recent history, according to an english-language propaganda channel called ‘Xi’s Moments’ on facebook.

Certainly, footage of the two leaders communicating face-to-face showed a beaming Vučić.

Overnight, China and Hungary signed a series of new agreements after Xi visited Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. The two men celebrated a ‘new era’ of relations between the two countries.

Hanging over all of this of course is the question of China’s relationship to Russia, still carrying on its invasion of Ukraine.

And while government spokespersons in the relevant European countries might be enthusiastic to note those discussions definitely came up (perhaps while sight-seeing,) it appears Xi Jinping’s charm offensive itself was the bigger story than that of being grilled.

The real signal here is Germany’s welcome to China back in Week 16. Germany is the EU’s largest economy, and while not part of AUKUS, clearly one of Australia’s allies in the region (despite relative isolation from one another.) Spend one night at a backpackers’ hostel if you need proof of that.

Interesting times. If developed European nations start taking a warmer tone – will that force Canberra to soften? (And what about Biden?)

Food for thought: the spectre of microchips looms over all.

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