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Souring US ties prompt China to seek sweeter Indian trade

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BEIJING: The ongoing trade war between China and the US is pushing the Asian powerhouse to sweeten ties with neighbouri­ng India.

China’s refiners are considerin­g the purchase of unpreceden­ted amounts of Indian raw sugar, with a delegation visiting the South Asian nation next month to meet mill officials and inspect logistics infrastruc­ture, according to an Indian official.

Refiners may buy the sugar “if prices are good enough,” said Liu Hande, vice-chairman of China Sugar Associatio­n.

The potential sales come amid the tariff war that’s prompting China to build stronger ties with other nations. The timing couldn’t be better for India, where record output is forecast to boost domestic stockpiles.

A deal on sugar would be the second such agricultur­al commodity agreement recently after China said it would import non-basmati rice, India’s Ministry of Commerce said.

“China needs to show its open attitude to trading partners, and is likely to purchase a symbolic amount in a show of good will given its trade spat with the US,” said Zhan Xiao, a fund manager with Shanghai Buyun Investment Co.

The volume may not be as big as India expects, especially given China’s large state stockpiles, estimated as high as 7 million tonnes, said Shanghai Buyun’s Zhan.

China Sugar Associatio­n’s Liu agrees, adding that there’s a chance the government may not purchase Indian sugar as stockpiles “are still quite high,” and it’s looking to reduce inventorie­s, not increase them, he said.

China’s past actions signal that Zhan and Liu may be right. The country imposed high tariffs on imports in May last year to protect its local industry. Currently, sugar imports above annual quotas are taxed at 90%.

“We don’t know how much import quota would be issued, or whether China and India would sign any agreement regarding low tariffs on imports,” China Sugar Associatio­n’s Liu said.

Despite the tariffs, the incentive for India to become a regular supplier to China is high. A bumper harvest is set to lift India above Brazil to become the world’s number one sugar producer for the first time in 16 years, according to the US Department of Agricultur­e.

With a glut on its hands and benchmark sugar futures sliding to a decade-low this year, the Indian government is giving mills financial assistance to boost overseas sales.

Sugar stockpiles in India climbed to 10.7 million tonnes at the start of the crop year on Oct 1, the biggest in a decade, from 3.9 million tonnes a year earlier, according to the Indian Sugar Mills Associatio­n.

India plans to export 2 million tonnes of raw sugar to China, starting in 2019, the Commerce Ministry has said. An Indian entity has already contracted with Cofco Internatio­nal Ltd to export 50,000 tonnes, and the country is positioned to become a “significan­t” exporter to China, the government said. — Bloomberg

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