News
Against all expectations, results of Chinese exports for the past six months were made available mid-November, making it possible to bring to a close the results of the 2017/2018 marketing year and opening prospects for 2018/2019.
According to a press release published on 7 November by the General Administration of [Chinese] Customs, “from 1 November 2018, the public can check online at the Customs Administration's portal for import and export commodities, import country of origin (region), export destination country (region), customs statistics and trade methods, as well as import and export goods and consignors […] and other statistical items classified and summarized [regarding] import and export goods trade statistics.”
Tomato news has evaluated the data published on the Chinese Customs Administration website, and concluded that the extent and acquisition capacities of the data on this site are sufficient to draw up a detailed analysis of export operations carried out by the Chinese industry over the past marketing year.
A number of general information points were also deduced from the material supplied by these official sources. Firstly, the available data shows that China's foreign sales results for the 2017/2018 marketing year (891 728 mT, of which 888 111 mT come under the classification of codes 20029011 and 20029019) have actually matched expectations (with a slight increase of approximately 4% compared to the results of the previous marketing year (855 843 mT)). These figures also confirm our estimates (890 000 mT) published on 20 September.


Last year, countries of the Far East, the Middle East and Eurasia confirmed the major role they play in China's export dynamics. Each of these three regions absorbed between 12.5% and 11.2% of the volumes of Chinese products exported in 2017/2018: 111 000 mT were shipped to the Philippines, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, etc., 104 000 mT were shipped to Saudi Arabia, Yemen, the Emirates, Oman, etc. and slightly more than 99 000 mT mainly to Russia and Kazakhstan.
The Chinese industry achieved about three quarters of its foreign sales in these four regions, with it completed with further shipments of sizable quantities to countries like Italy (36 000 mT), Algeria (34 000 mT), the United Kingdom (10 000 mT), Poland (8 700 mT), Australia (8 300 mT), etc. However, it is important to note that although the 2017/2018 marketing year featured notable improvements for Chinese performances on the markets of the Far East and the Middle East (respectively 7% and 17% compared to the average result of the three previous marketing years – 2014/2015, 2015/2016 and 2016/2017), Chinese operators also recorded notable drops on several major markets like Eurasia (-17%) or Western Europe (-42%, mainly Italy and Germany).

In a particularly deteriorated trade context, the total value of Chinese paste exports during the 2017/2018 marketing year, despite being bolstered by an increase of approximately 4% in volume, only grew by 1%. The year ended on a result of close on USD 667 million. The result of the previous marketing year amounted to USD 659 million.
It is noteworthy that the average monthly value of goods shipped by the Chinese industry under customs codes 20029011, 20029019 and 20029090, which had already depreciated at the time when publication of customs statistics was suspended last April, continued its downward slide until June, and even beyond. This value should be differentiated from the monthly quotations made available notably for products from the new 2018 harvest, and it retrospectively applies to export volumes already shipped, but that may have absorbed, over the period considered, products from stocks built up during the previous season and therefore valued at a lower rate than the 2018 harvest. This crop was estimated at close on USD 765 /tonne in December 2017, but dropped to below USD 738 /tonne last June.

The average monthly value of the products exported, after climbing slightly in July, dropped once again to a level close on USD 727 /tonne in September.

See also our article posted on 20 September: "The 2017/2018 marketing year: unsatisfactory results"
Long term evolution of Chinese tomato products exported under tariff codes 20029011 and 20029019.
























