Economic Development

US Mid-Market Enterprises: Confident in overseas investments in 2016

August 02, 2016

Global

August 02, 2016

Global
Josselyn Simpson

Contributor

Josselyn has worked in the thought leadership and quantitative research team of the Economist Intelligence Unit for more than 15 years. She is an expert in creating engaging content for C-level and other senior executives. Among her areas of interest are organisation, governance, and the effects of technology on the workplace. She was also a Senior Campaign Manager at Booz & Company and a Senior Editor at McKinsey & Company. Through those roles she developed significant expertise in global thought leadership development and programme management. She began her career at The New Yorker. She is based in New York and holds an undergraduate degree with honors from Harvard College.

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Business leaders around the world began 2016 facing a gut-churning bout of market volatility.

Many financial markets fell by at least 10% between January 1st and mid-February; 2016 had the worst 10-day start to a year since 1897. No doubt remembering how quickly the contagion of the Great Recession spread and the resulting economic devastation, in early 2016 executives started making fresh assessments of how broader economic factors should affect their operational decision-making.

It turns out that middle market companies with substantial operations in the US may be anxious, but they’re not pulling back. “We’re expanding in both the US and other parts of the world in order to diversify our business and supply chain,” says Nitin Rakesh, CEO of Syntel, Inc., a Michigan-based global provider of digital modernization services. Indeed, according to a recent survey of US executives at mid-market companies to understand their reactions to the early-year market volatility, that volatility did not, on the whole, shake most executives’ confidence in investing abroad. In fact, many plan to increase investment in their operations abroad for the rest of 2016. The survey was conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) and sponsored by HSBC.

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