Global Times

Yiwu’s Christmas orders slump 50% amid pandemic

- By Huang Lanlan Page Editor: zhanghongp­ei@globaltime­s.com.cn

Yiwu in East China’s Zhejiang Province, the world’s largest Christmas product export market that produces 60 percent of global Christmas decoration­s, has been slammed by the global COVID-19 pandemic, with export orders plummeting by 50 percent, industry insiders said.

Many exporters in Yiwu didn’t get Christmas-related orders until May or even June, two months later than their usual busy “Christmas season” from March to April, said Cai Qinliang, secretary general of the Yiwu Christmas Decoration­s Associatio­n.

“This season has seen export orders slump by around 50 percent on a yearly basis,” Cai said.

The market’s delayed and shrunken Christmas order book is a direct result of the pandemic, which has made overseas buyers wary, especially those in the worst-hit countries such as the US and Brazil, Cai told the Global Times.

Wang Liqin, a Yiwu-based exporter of Christmas items like Santa Claus figures, who used to get some 5 million yuan ($707,000) of orders each year, said she has only received orders worth less than 1 million yuan so far this year.

Wang’s major clients are in Brazil and Mexico. In most years, their orders flooded in starting in early March. But this year, the orders didn’t come until the end of April, and they were much smaller. “One client decreased the amount from 100,000 yuan to 20,000 yuan,” Wang told the Global Times.

Curtain maker Zhejiang Yongli Warp Knitting (Yongli), whose two largest clients are from Brazil and the US – the two countries with the most COVID-19 cases at present – said orders from the two have been halved this year. By contrast, its European buyers, accounting for 10-20 percent of orders in the past, contribute­d nearly half of its orders this year, said sales manager Hu Ligang.

Still, total orders are down 30 percent, and Yongli is considerin­g moving online and using livestream­ing platforms to offset these problems.

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