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Textile Firms Eye A Deal

Textile Firms Eye A Deal

Write: Yevgeni [2011-05-20]

BOTH Chinese textile firms struggling to survive and US retailers require a trade dispute settlement between the two nations as soon as possible.

"Our time is running out, but I can only get some marginal products. Can we expect American consumers to take towels instead of pants next year?" American businessman Johnason Lee said. He was attending the 98th Chinese Export Commodities Fair that opened on Saturday in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province.

Deals struck at the biannual event normally make up one-third of China's general trade every year. Worldwide buyers often place orders for the coming year and sometimes short-term orders for the coming
months.

At this year's fall event, however, uncertainty looms on both sides of the negotiation table.

"Nothing is certain, which means nothing can be done," said Tao Huaiping, general manager of Knitwear Imports and Exports Co under the Huihong Group, a leading textile and apparel exporter.

"Unless China and the United States reach an agreement, we won't take any orders ?it's far too risky," Tao said.

For Tao and many others in the business, the United States and Europe are still their major markets. China's textile exports to these destinations totaled US$25.1 billion in the first eight months of this year.

That equals 34 percent of the country's total exports, according to China Textile Import and Export Chamber.

According to the latest China-EU deal reached on September 5, Chinese textiles blocked at European ports were to enter the European Union as of September 14. It ended a trade row that had items from lingerie to pullovers piled up in customs warehouses.

China, nevertheless, is yet to strike a "win-win" deal with the United States on export quantities and growth rates for the coming few years. A sixth round of Sino-US talks ended on Thursday without reaching agreement.

"Chinese textile firms hope the two countries will strike a deal soon because businesses have been disturbed by the US restrictive trade policies over the past year," said the chamber's vice-president Cao Xinyu.

Uncertainty has already disrupted next year's production plan, he said.