China's textile industry will start to lose money if the yuan
continues to appreciate, according to a report by the National
Development and Reform Commission (NDRC).
"With their average profit margin currently at 3 percent,
textile companies will no longer be able to absorb the cost of the
rising yuan," said the report.
The warning follows market forecasts that the yuan would
appreciate by three percent against the US dollar to 7.72 over the
next 12 months.
Last week, the yuan gained 135 base points against the US dollar
in three successive days to hit 7.9540. On Monday, the exchange
rate of the yuan against the dollar stood at 7.9499, up nearly four
percent on last July.
Top economist Sun-Bae Kim, of Goldman Sachs on the Asian
Economy, made an even bolder prediction, saying that the value of
the yuan against the dollar would increase by six percent in 12
months.
Chinese textile manufacturers have been marking down their
prices this year to sustain their exports and offset the negative
impact of the rising yuan this year, said the report. "If the
appreciation continues, the profit margin will be eaten up within a
year."
Citing statistics from the Guotai Junan Securities Research
Institute, the commission stressed that a one-percent appreciation
in the yuan would lead to a loss of two percent in profit margins.
In sectors with heavy dependence on exports such as cotton, wool
and fabric for home use, the decline could be as much as six
percent, it said.
As domestic textile exporters can only earn an average of US$0.3
from one shirt, the appreciation of the yuan has emphasized the
need for textile manufacturers to sustain their competitiveness
through technical innovation and intellectual property rights
protection rather than through price cuts, said vice-president Li
Lingmin of the China National Textiles Imports and Exports
Corporation.
The growth rate of China's textile exports has slowed but its
textile exports still rank the world's largest. From January to
July, its textile exports reached US$27,051 million, up 18.7
percent on the previous year. The growth rate is 4.3 percent lower
than the previous year and 3.1 percent lower than in January.
(Xinhua News Agency September 5, 2006)