The Korea Times

Chinese exporters despair at trade fair

Goods sold ‘as cheap as cabbage’; political tension, wars affect sales

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— Wu Huazhan’s Chinese television factory used to impose minimum orders to manage production efficientl­y. Times are now so bleak, it will take any order.

Foshan Top Winning Import & Export’s profit margin has dropped to a wafer-thin 0.5 percent from 2 percent some three or four years ago, according to Wu, a co-owner of the Guangdong-based factory and one of the many exporters fretting about business prospects at China’s biggest trade fair in the southern city of Guangzhou.

“We’re selling electrical appliances as cheap as cabbage,” he added. “If it continues for another year or two, we’ll have to change careers.”

The sombre mood at the twice-ayear Canton Fair scarcely got a lift from data on Tuesday showing that the world’s second-largest economy grew at a faster-than-expected 5.3 percent in the first quarter.

A sharp contractio­n in Chinese exports for March in dollar terms despite growth in volumes and data showing producer prices extending a year-and-a-half-long decline have tempered hopes that China is on its way to finding sustained post-pandemic growth.

Chinese exporters are having to contend with heightened economic and political tensions between Beijing and Washington as well as a slowdown in global trade due to the war in Ukraine and a worsening Middle East crisis. The manufactur­ing sector is also plagued by excess capacity.

In one encouragin­g sign, the number of foreign buyers attending the fair on Monday and Tuesday has jumped by about a fifth from the first two days of the last one in October, according to organizers.

But some attendees said business felt slower.

“On the first day last year, I received more than a dozen inquiries, but today I only received three business cards,” said Lois Zhang, sales manager at Enping City Shuangyi Electronic­s Industrial, which produces speakers and microphone­s.

A manager at an outdoor heater manufactur­er based in Jiangsu province said he didn’t have a lot of hope for his European and North American markets, where most of his clients are based.

“One of our large customer’s orders this year was 25 percent lower than last year and other customers have yet to decide whether they want to keep placing orders,” said Fan, who asked that only his surname be used so he could speak openly about business prospects.

Fan said his customers were still running down their inventorie­s and he hoped their orders would pick up later this year.

 ?? Reuters-Yonhap ?? People visit the booth of a braiding machine producer from Xuzhou at the China Import and Export Fair, also known as Canton Fair, in Guangzhou, China, Tuesday.
Reuters-Yonhap People visit the booth of a braiding machine producer from Xuzhou at the China Import and Export Fair, also known as Canton Fair, in Guangzhou, China, Tuesday.

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