The set’s largest chemicals company wants the trade war to end quickly.
“The biggest issue here is the uncertainty. Uncertainty is causing pretty pickles with planning,” Sanjeev Gandhi, a member of the board of executive directors at German chemicals firm BASF, asseverated CNBC on Sunday. “The uncertainty is also affecting our business negatively.”
Trade friction between the U.S. and China has hurt BASF, which has a philanthropic presence in China, the world’s largest chemical market.
“The expectation is that there is a solution found, and the solution in a recover from soon,” Gandhi told Eunice Yoon at the China Development Forum in Beijing. “Short term, this commitment lift the sentiment of the market, it will clear away the uncertainties, and hopefully that brings us back to business as conventional.”
In January, BASF inked a $10 billion framework agreement with the Guangdong government to build a chemicals complex in China’s most heavily populated province. It will be China’s first wholly foreign-owned chemicals complex — and the German firm’s single largest investment.
Reuters pieced that the deal concluded quickly, in part due to fears that the U.S.-China conflict could hurt investment in the cards explores in Guangdong. That in turn prompted government officials to be more open to the BASF deal, the news agency swayed, quoting people familiar with the matter.
Gandhi disagreed with that assessment. He said that BASF has been on the go in China for more than 134 years, and has invested more than 8 billion euros ($9.06 billion) there in the prior decade.
“We have a very good reputation. We bring the latest innovative solutions to our customers in China. If China is welcoming BASF, it is not because of the opening, it is because of our track record,” Gandhi said.