China impounds palm oil from missing importer-traders
Wednesday June 25 2008
By Niu Shuping
BEIJING, June 25 (Reuters) - Chinese authorities have impounded palm oil stocks in a northern city after a major trading company’s boss vanished, leaving a question mark over at least a hundred million yuan in prepayments from clients, traders said on Wednesday.
Clients of the Zhejiang X & K Import and Export Co. Ltd in the port city of
Courts sealed about 70,000 tonnes of palm oil held in tanks in
“At least one cargo of about 20,000 tonnes was sealed in
Calls to the company went unanswered on Wednesday. Police and port officials in
“Many of Xiekai’s clients had paid in advance. Not so many trading companies in the country can ensure long-term supplies, but this company did,” said a trading manager with Zhejiang Shining Gold Foodstuffs Co. Ltd, who said his company was unable to access its prepaid cargo after it was impounded in
Wang had collected more than 100 million yuan ($14.56 million) in pre-payments for palm oil, estimated traders.
Xiekai offered cargoes into
“It collected full payment for cargoes at below-market prices before the ships arrived,” said one executive at a competitor in
“Some of its clients could face heavy losses.”
Chinese companies have imported around 500,000 tonnes of palm oil each month from
But prices have dropped sharply since then, leaving many of the booked cargoes unprofitable.
Xiekai was set up in 2003 and traded products including plastics, textiles, machinery and chemicals, the firm says on its website http://www.xkchina.com/. Its trading turnover reached 400 million yuan in 2005, the last year for which information is available.
Trade in edible oils into
Xiekai imported more than 400,000 tonnes of palm oil a year, said the Shining Gold Foodstuffs trading manager.
But its suppliers have cut off delivery since the problems emerged, compounding the difficulty faced by Xiekai’s clients, he added. ($1=6.870 Yuan) (Editing by Lucy Hornby and Michael Urquhart)













