The raw silk market in China has been on a rollercoaster ride
this year.
Statistics from a monitoring center in east China's Zhejiang Province showed the material soared
to 360,000 yuan (US$45,000) per ton in February from January's
250,000 yuan (US$31,000) per ton, in contrast to the 160,000 yuan
(US$20,000) per ton registered last February.
But from April until now the price of raw silk fell sharply to
210,000 yuan (US$26,000) per ton, equivalent to last October's
price level, hurting both suppliers and clothing makers.
"From the early 1990s, the silk price remained between 110,000
yuan and 240,000 yuan (US$14,000 to US$30,000) per ton, and such
bumpy conditions have never happened before," said Ma Xihao,
president of Jiaxing-based trader Dajiangnan Silk Co Ltd.
Dramatic price fluctuations in the silk market were partly
caused by speculation that Jiaxing-based China Cocoon and Silk
Exchange in Zhejiang Province, the country's largest entity for
spot silk trading, has illegally organized a silk futures
exchange.
Established in July 1993, the China Cocoon and Silk Exchange is
only allowed to engage in spot transactions and electronic contract
transactions.
Currently the exchange has an annual turnover of more than 10
billion yuan (US$1.25 billion), with most of its products traded
for export.
In its letter to the Zhejiang provincial government earlier this
year, the Ministry of Commerce said that as the country's biggest
platform for cocoon and silk transactions, the exchange helps form
the "Jiaxing Index" that drew attention from both home and
abroad.
But it has long been suspected that the exchange illegally
organized trading for silk futures contracts. Traders including
Dajiangnan have taken the exchange to court and proceedings are
expected to begin next month.
"It can't be denied that speculative behaviours exist in the
China Cocoon and Silk Exchange," Qian Youqing, secretary-general of
the Chinese Silk Association, said earlier.
Experts warned the chain reaction caused by a volatile cocoon
silk market might badly hurt the silk industry that relies heavily
on exports and it may lose its advantage in influencing the cocoon
silk price on the international market.
Assistant Minister of Commerce Huang Hai said at a working
conference for cocoon and silk in April that an immature raw
material trading market, incomplete regulations and the lack of
experience dealing with excessive speculation have led to frequent
disturbances on some commodity trading markets.
The ministry also warned the industry might suffer a great loss
and lose its right to determine the cocoon silk price if the issue
couldn't be dealt with properly.
"Currently some silk and clothing makers have reduced their
production or switched to other businesses given the high prices of
raw silk," said Xu Kunyuan, vice-president of the China National
Textile and Apparel Council.
A fading market would mean China would lose its right to
determine industry prices, he added.
(China Daily July 8, 2006)