China's export tax cuts could worsen global steel, chemical gluts


(MENAFN- Gulf Times) China said yesterday it would cut some import and export taxes next year to boost its ailing trade sector, raising concerns that cheaper Chinese products could exacerbate a global oversupply of basic materials such as steel and chemicals.

Trade tensions are already growing with Europe and the US which have accused China of dumping steel on world markets, and industry experts said the tax breaks on other types of steel, iron and other products could aggravate supply gluts.

The intense pressure facing Chinese manufacturers was clear in data early in the day which prompted worries that the world's second-largest economy could be falling into a Japan-style deflation trap.

Companies slashed prices for the 45th month in a row in November as they struggled to sell their goods, with the producer price index (PPI) down 5.9% from a year earlier, the fastest since the global financial crisis.
The weak price report came on the heels of trade data on Tuesday which showed China's exports fell for the fifth consecutive month in November while imports contracted for the 13th month straight, casting doubt on hopes that the cooling economy would stabilise in the fourth quarter.
Nonetheless, basic material exports were relatively strong, as weak domestic demand spurs firms to redirect cargoes abroad.

"We think it's a longer-term dynamic playing out: China exporting its surplus to the Western world," said ANZ analyst Daniel Hynes, referring to a 15% surge in unwrought aluminium and product exports to 450,000 tonnes in November.

China's oil refiners shipped a record amount of fuel products in the first 11 months of the year, aluminium processors sold their second-highest tonnage ever and steelmakers increased exports by 22% to a new record.
The export tax cuts will apply to steel billet (bars) and pig iron, lowering them to 20% and 10%, respectively, from the current 25% effective Jan. 1, the Ministry of Finance said on Wednesday. Export tariffs on phosphoric acid and ammonia also will be eliminated.

Taxes also would be adjusted to encourage imports of advanced equipment, energy raw materials, and some components.
While higher equipment and raw material imports could be a boon for China's trading partners and some Western firms, the policy move raised concerns that China hopes to ease pressure on its embattled heavy industrial sector by sending more excess production abroad.

The price deflation in China's industrial sector is in part a reflection of slumping global commodity prices since 2011, but also highlights weaker demand for basic construction materials at home following an extended downturn in the property market.

And with a large inventory of unsold homes discouraging new construction and investment, much of the heavy industrial build-out in steel, cement and other materials created to serve China's housing boom in the 2000s now has nowhere to go.

"Alarmingly, the GDP deflator, a broader measure of price changes in the economy, declined 0.7% y/y in Q3, indicating that China has entered a deflationary era," wrote Liu Li-Gang and Louis Lam, economists at ANZ Bank in Hong Kong in a note.

While China's consumer inflation ticked up on the year to 1.5% in November from 1.3% in October, the increase was largely due to food prices, not an improvement in economic activity.

Other data this week is expected to show further weakness in industrial output and investment, with a possible pick-up in retail sales the lone bright spot. That will reinforce expectations that Beijing will have to roll out more stimulus in 2016 after six interest rate cuts over the past year and a slew of other measures.


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