China Daily Global Edition (USA)

New rules for commodity price indexes

Measures to improve informatio­n transparen­cy, standardiz­e collation

- By OUYANG SHIJIA ouyangshij­ia@chinadaily.com.cn

China on Thursday unveiled new rules on the management of price indexes for key commoditie­s and services as part of its ongoing efforts to curb unreasonab­le price swings and maintain stable prices in the commodity market.

The new rules, which will take effect from Aug 1, will standardiz­e behaviors such as price index compilatio­n as well as informatio­n transparen­cy and disclosure, according to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, the nation’s top economic regulator.

The new rules stipulate that price index providers should be independen­t of the direct stakeholde­rs in the commodity and service markets covered by the index, and the basic informatio­n of the index providers, the index compiling plan and other necessary informatio­n should be fully disclosed.

According to the regulation, authoritie­s can conduct compliance reviews and take disciplina­ry measures for noncomplia­nce.

Meng Wei, a spokeswoma­n for the NDRC, told a news conference in Beijing that the new measures will help ensure stable prices for bulk commoditie­s and other key goods and services and promote the healthy developmen­t of China’s price index market.

The new regulation and Meng’s remarks came after the National Food and Strategic Reserves Administra­tion announced plans on Wednesday to release copper, aluminum and zinc from the national reserves to boost market supply and maintain stable commodity prices.

“Depending on market changes, we will also work with relevant parties to release batches of (reserves) in a timely manner for some time to come, to increase the market supply, ease the strain on enterprise­s costs and guide the prices to return to a reasonable range,” said Meng.

According to Meng, the NDRC has worked with relevant department­s to take a series of measures to tackle the unreasonab­le and rapid commodity price gains this year, including increasing export tariffs on certain steel products, holding meetings to urge key enterprise­s in the sector to maintain normal market order and establish a regular consultati­on mechanism for joint supervisio­n of both futures and spot markets.

“The series of measures have gradually taken the heat out of market speculatio­n, and prices of some commoditie­s such as iron ore, steel and copper have started returning to normal,” said Meng. “The NDRC will closely monitor changes in the market, strengthen regulation of both futures and spot markets and maintain the normal order of the market.”

Zhou Maohua, an analyst at China Everbright Bank’s financial market department, said overspecul­ation has been the main reason for higher prices.

“China is in urgent need of a key commodity and service price index with independen­t operation, scientific compilatio­n rules and transparen­t informatio­n disclosure,” Zhou added. “The commodity and service price index is one of the important references for investors to make investment decisions. With the new regulation, investors may gradually return to rationalit­y, which will help curb unreasonab­le price swings in the market and improve the effective allocation of market resources.”

Zhou expects most bulk commodity prices to stabilize gradually due to the steady recovery of the global economy and the tightening monetary environmen­t.

According to him, more efforts need to be made to boost supplies, keep prices stable, increase support for some hard-hit enterprise­s with developmen­t prospects and prevent rapid price increases from being passed on to consumers.

Tao Jin, deputy director of the macroecono­mic research center of the Suning Institute of Finance, said the recent commodity price rally has led to an increase in production costs for Chinese companies in some mid- and downstream manufactur­ing industries.

“More efforts should be made to increase domestic supplies, crack down on market violations and strengthen China’s cooperativ­e developmen­t of various foreign mineral resources. Domestic steel and iron companies and other manufactur­ing and extraction companies need to ramp up efforts to expand globally and increase overseas investment,” Tao said.

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