Tuesday 9 December 2014

Mandatory registration for cotton export goes

Shipment norms for yarn also eased
The Government has eased cotton and yarn export norms. Exporters now need not register with the Director-General of Foreign Trade before making the shipment. The move is expected to speed up shipments, particularly when overseas demand for cotton and yarn has dropped sharply.
Notifications
With the change in rules, the Centre has done away with the registration requirement for exports of cotton and its yarn, the government said on Monday in two separate notifications.
Earlier, traders were required to register their targeted export volume in advance for the entire year.
DK Nair, Secretary-General, Confederation of Indian Textile Industry, said the development would remove the unnecessary hurdle and ease the process of exports.
No immediate impact
However, he said, it will not make any immediate impact on the demand for exports.
With cotton being procured at the minimum support price (MSP) by the Cotton Corporation of India, yarn prices are likely to come under pressure as globally cotton prices are falling, he said. “If the cotton prices stabilise in the country in view of the MSP operations and prices fall globally, then our yarn will not be competitive,” said Nair.
The Cotton Corporation of India is gearing up to procure cotton worth Rs. 12,000 crore this season as prices in most cotton growing States have fallen below the MSP level announced by the government.
CCI is expected to buy 60 lakh bales of cotton across Telangana , Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra.
Bumper crop
The country is likely to harvest a record 40 million bales (37 million bales) of cotton this crop year that began in October. It is expected to surpass China as the world’s top producer.
Cotton export from India has almost come to a standstill with prices in the domestic market ruling five cents above the global market.
China, which imported 50 per cent of the 12 million bales shipped by India last year, is cutting down on shipments.
With the high minimum support price, cotton consignment from India works out to about 71 cents per pound against the now average global price of about 66 cents per pound.

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