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Iran war sends China factory costs soaring, raising risk of pricier goods worldwide

Malay Mail

FOSHAN (China), May 7 โ€” Vacuum cleaners and vapes could get more expensive if the Iran war drags on for much longer, Chinese factory owners and traders warn, as the worldโ€™s manufacturing hub reels from โ€œcrazyโ€ costs.

Weeks of US-Israeli strikes on Iran and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz have choked Asiaโ€™s oil supply, stymieing the production of plastic โ€” derived from oil โ€” across the region.

Manufacturing giant China has been comparatively sheltered from fuel shortages thanks to oil reserves and renewable energy, but local factories are picking up a ballooning raw materials bill.

โ€œBasically, weโ€™ve been losing money on all our orders,โ€ said Bryant Chen, a manager at vacuum cleaner factory RIMOO in southern Guangdong provinceโ€™s Foshan.

The price of plastic has risen roughly 50 per cent since before the Iran war, Chen told AFP as workers behind him fastened suction tubes to metal tanks.

โ€œThe costs of the products that we are making are being very greatly affected,โ€ the 42-year-old said, listing plastic, copper for the vacuumโ€™s motor and raw materials in its power cords.

โ€œTypically at this time weโ€™d be entering peak season, but compared to the same period previously, shipment and production data arenโ€™t very optimistic.โ€

Two hours away, plastic traders in storage hub Zhangmutou said price fluctuations were the worst theyโ€™ve seen in decades.

โ€œIt has never been this crazy,โ€ said Li Dong, 46, who entered the industry two decades ago.

The plastic, rice-sized pellets he buys for local phone case and EV battery factories jumped wildly in March, triggering days of panic that jammed the small townโ€™s roads as factories rushed to stock up.

โ€˜Mutual state of declineโ€™ย 

Exporters in Zhangmutou showed AFP a vast range of products their pellets would become, including drones and badminton birdies.

One trader sifted through pink, green and purple beads that she said would be moulded into e-cigarette casings sold in the Middle East.

The Iran war has hit plastic production even harder than bottlenecks caused by the Covid pandemic, when ships could not come and go from China, Li said.

Some sellers cashed in on the plastic panic, he added, fighting to take advantage of surging costs.

Li said the price of plastic had dropped around 10 to 20 per cent from its height, but he cautioned against further oil hold-ups.

โ€œThe factories we supply to will suffer the most because their direct costs will rise,โ€ he said.

For exporters, the Middle East crisis has added to the hangover still lingering from Donald Trumpโ€™s sweeping global tariffs last year.

The US Supreme Court struck down those levies as illegal, but tolls on Chinese goods entering the US still sit at around 20 per cent.

On the outskirts of Guangzhou, one garment factory owner lamented the chaos triggered by the US Presidentโ€™s trade war.

Overseas clients are afraid to place orders, while Chinese manufacturers cannot pin down changing costs.

โ€œAs a result, everyone is in a mutual state of decline,โ€ garment boss Zhou, 55, said.

While 80 per cent of his clients have returned, the fabrics scattered on his factory floor made into sweatpants headed for Europe and North America have risen 10 to 20 per cent in cost due to the Middle East war.

As overseas orders dropped, seamsters went months without a job.

โ€˜Tensions rise, orders disappearโ€™ย 

Migrant worker Jingjing returned to her hometown in Hubei province for two months, where she made half the 400 yuan (RM240) she now earns in Guangzhouโ€™s garment factories.

โ€œWhen tensions rise... orders suddenly disappear,โ€ the 42-year-old said.

But this year she said she always has something to do.

In a damp back alley, Jingjing joined job-seekers milling about leisurely, haggling for higher wages while garment bosses perched on scooters brandished hiring signs, desperate for day labourers.

Chen, the vacuum factory manager, said he was โ€œstill worriedโ€ about surging shipping costs should the Iran war drag on.

โ€œIf shipping costs rise, it will cause the final costs for our customers to increase sharply,โ€ he said.

They โ€œwill have no way to sell normally, because the costs are just too highโ€.

Chen said RIMOO plans to expand to other markets beyond the Middle East where around 60 percent of its customers are based.

โ€œWe are still optimistic,โ€ he said. โ€œThe market demand still exists.โ€

But analysts warn the warโ€™s impact on costs will be felt for months.

โ€œThe problem is all of these costs will filter through the supply chains for the rest of the year,โ€ said supply chain consultant Cameron Johnson.

โ€œThe longer it goes on, that kind of cascades into much bigger problems, particularly if thereโ€™s not enough oil in general to run stuff.โ€ โ€” AFPย 

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