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china rein supreme in world commodities

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    China Seen To Rein Supreme In World Commodities In 2014: Cyclope Report
    Times of Oman
    By AFP
    Sunday May 18, 2014 11:11 AM

    Beijing: Grains, metals, meat: these are just three of the commodities being sucked in by the voracious Chinese economy which is set to be the key driver on raw materials markets this year.

    French commodity research specialist Cyclope in a report published this week argues that "in the coming months, global markets will feel even the slightest sneeze from China".

    World commodity prices have surged in recent years, driven by rising demand from increasingly affluent shoppers in emerging markets and particularly China.

    China has also amassed huge reserves of dollars and has the financial fire-power to buy and outbid, since many commodities are traded in dollars.

    China overtook India to become the world's biggest gold-consuming nation in 2013, and the World Gold Council forecasts that its appetite could jump by about 20 per cent by 2017.

    It is also close to overtaking the United States as the world's biggest oil importer and has become a vast consumer of many agricultural commodities as more people can afford to eat meat and dairy products.

    Its influence on global commodity markets has become even more important in the wake of the global economic crisis, which has hampered growth in the developed world.

    Chinese demand
    Even sales of top French spirits are being driven by Chinese demand, said Philippe Chalmin, a professor at Paris Dauphine University, who led the Cyclope report.

    But growth in the Chinese economy, the world's second-biggest after the United States discounting the ranking of the European Union, is decelerating as Beijing's leaders wean the country off investment as the key driver of expansion and shift the focus towards consumer spending.

    The slowdown in China last year had a huge impact on metal markets in particular, sending prices lower.

    On average, raw material prices fell by 5.0 per cent in 2013, the report said. In 2014, Cyclope predicts that prices will fall even further, by an average of 4.0 per cent, despite support from an expected uptick in global growth.

    Nonetheless, "the current slowdown and future activity should not cause major adjustments," reads the report.

    "The slow transformation of the growth model and the further development, instead, point to a higher Chinese demand for raw materials."

    A giant appetite
    China cemented its position as a key player in world cereal markets in 2013 when it resumed international wheat imports for the first time for 10 years.

    China has also become the world's second-biggest buyer of world beef products, with its imports quadrupling in recent years owing to concerns about local products after numerous health scares.

    If this appetite for foreign beef continues, "The global market for beef will turned upside down," the report says.

    Similarly, several scandals involving tainted milk and a growing appetite for Western diets have also turned China into a "key to world dairy markets", said Chalmin.

    China's influence can be even harder to gauge because its politics are so opaque, Chalmin added.

    In recent months several agricultural commodities of which China is a major importer — soya, wheat and corn — have felt the effects of Beijing's policy changes.

    Coffee and cocoa are the only agricultural commodities which have been little affected by China's rise — although consumption of both of these is growing
 
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