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Shrimp
market affected by dumping decision
As American retailers
head into the prime holiday buying season,
they have one question
to ask suppliers: what impact does Tuesday’s
shrimp dumping decision hae on supply?
China and Vietnam, both
non-market economies, are perceived to
have bore the brunt of the
U.S. Departmnet of Commerc’s preliminary
determination that they are dumping product
in the market and should pay tariffs for
doing so.
Well over 60 percent of the Chinese shrimp
supply is now facing tariffs of 49 percent
to 113 percent.
The duties apply to canned and frozen warmwater
shrimp.
U.S. retailers have been
depending on lots of Chinese cooked shrimp
to fuel sales over
the past two years- and haven’t been
disappointed. But with between 50 and 100
million pounds of supply now in jeopardy,
retailers could soon have to place their
bets on other sources.
Chinese shrimp imkports
to the US market skyrocketed in 2003 to
178.6 million pounds – a
64 percent increase over the volume in 2002.
For the first four months of 2003, Chinese
shrimp imports were up 57 percent in volume
over the same period last year.
The Commerce Department will make a separate
decision on July 28 on whether to impose
tariffs on shrimp from Thailand, Ecuador,
Brazil, and India. China and Vietnam were
singled out because they are not free market-based
economies.
Anticipating harsh treatment for the largest
non-market economy in the world, and a shortfall
in supply, the shrimp market strengthened
considerably since last month. Prices have
jumped 20 percent since early June. The cost
of the bell weather 41-50 count white shrimp
has increased from just over $2 a pound a
month ago to more than $2.50 per pound.
Mid-to-late summer is when the big retailers
pull the trigger on shrimp sales for the
winter holiday. Even the big foodservice
chains start sniffing around for sales on
shrimp for fourth quarter needs.
From an importer’s standpoint, less
supply is a positive outcome of the dumping
decision. For consumers, it will most likely
result in a price hike. But while few expect
any big leaps in market prices now that the
(preliminary) verdict has been handed down
on the nation’s second largest shrimp
supplier, continued strength and even an
up tick is widely presumed.
In China, the four main exporters, which
account for 43 percent of Chinese shrimp
exports to the US market, received duties
of 0 percent to 98 percent.
Assistant Secretary of
Commerce for Import Administration, James
Jochum, said in a conference
call Tuesday that the wide disparity in dumpin
duties is because two of the companies had
lower costs of production because they were
vertically integrated – one reeived
a 0 percent (or de minimus) tariff rate and
the other a 7.67 percent tariff rate. The
latter, Shantou Red Garden Foodstuff Co.,Ltd.,
supplies Vernon, CA-based Red Chamber CO,
arguably one of the largest shrimp suppliers
in the United States.
The other two received
duties in excess of 90 percent. One of
those was Hong Kong’s
Yelin Enterprise Co., which reportedly shrimps
product to another of Amercia’s largest
shrimp importers, Ocean Duke, located in
Torrance, CA.
The next tier of 21 companies represented
36 percent of Chinese exports and were assessed
a 49 percent dumping duty. The last tier
of Chinese firms represent 22 percent of
the US export shrimp volumeand were assessed
a duty of 112 percent.
The Commerce Department also said that the
dutie swill be 90 days retroactive for certain
Chinese exporters.
Chinese and Vietnamese
exporters will soon find it difficult to
pay those duties from
a cash flow standpointand still have the
products’ prices fit in the marketplace.
How many will beable to make itwork? And,
as Chinese farmers wrap up harvest this month,
where can they expect that product to go?
That all remains to be seen.
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