Buyers return to China's largest trade fair but orders still elusive
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[October 30, 2023] By
David Kirton
GUANGZHOU (Reuters) - Foreign buyers returned in force for the autumn
round of the world's largest trade show, heading towards pre-COVID
numbers, but Chinese sellers said orders remain low as Christmas nears,
with few expecting global demand to recover soon.
With three days left of the Canton Fair's final phase, some 157,200
overseas buyers had visited by Saturday, organizers said, to throng
booths sprawling over 1.5 million sq m (1.8 million sq yards), or the
equivalent of 280 football fields.
The visitor numbers were up 53.6% on the spring event, which was the
first after the COVID-19 pandemic, and drive attendance figures into the
same ballpark as the 186,000 foreigners who visited in the autumn of
2019.
"You would never know COVID had happened," said David Holmes, a British
buyer for the hospitality industry in Britain and North America, who has
been visiting for more than 15 years.
Holmes was scouring the glass and ceramic products among tens of
thousands of booths selling everything from tents and kitchen worktops
to goblin costumes.
But 2023 had been a tough year, Holmes reckoned.
"With inflation coming down, one would hope that things will get a bit
easier, the current situation will improve, and at that point the
consumer will get more confidence.
"At the moment they're wanting to save the money they've got for heating
homes and feeding families."
Ten exporters who normally do much of their business in Europe said
sales there were down 10% to 30% this year.
"Everyone is affected, because the price of electricity has gone up a
lot, and the war with Russia and Ukraine is still going on, and now with
Israel, a lot of people are really scared," said Jimmy Chen, the boss of
Chengkuo Group.
Sales were down about a tenth, said Chen, speaking in front of his
company's display of life-sized Father Christmas dolls and elves lined
up on shelves.
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Foreign visitors walk by booths in an exhibition hall during the
Canton Fair in Guangzhou, China October 23, 2023. REUTERS/David
Kirton
"We do a lot (of business) with German markets and if they're not
strong, then Western Europe's feeling unstable."
The most recent trade data showed China's slump in exports and
imports was gradually easing, as exports in September declined 6.2%
from a year ago, a moderation from August's drop of 8.8%.
The trend appeared to be backed up by improvement last month in new
export orders featuring in an official factory survey two weeks ago,
partly because of a peak export shipping season for Christmas
products and favorable base effects.
While orders were finished for this coming Christmas, Chen was still
hopeful for an improvement by the second half of 2024.
Xiao Haicheng, of Foshan Gaoming Yuehua Sanitary Ware, said the
maker of jacuzzis and luxury showers plans to push sales to
countries participating in the Belt and Road initiative, to help
offset this year's revenue drop of 30% in sales to Europe, its main
market.
"We've got to supplement it somewhere, though we're definitely more
optimistic than during the pandemic," he said.
The European Union's trade deficit with China widened to $276.6
billion in 2022 from $208.4 billion a year earlier, Chinese customs
data shows.
China's exports to the European Union fell 10.6% on the year in the
first nine months of 2023, to stand at $382.18 billion, while
exports to the United States fell 16.4% to $372.25 billion, official
data shows.
(Reporting by David Kirton; Additional reporting by Joe Cash in
Beijing; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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