Textile industry stakeholders agree on no TCP intervention

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A meeting of the textile industry ministry was held on December 28 with the stakeholders of the cotton trade industry, including Karachi Cotton Association (KCA) and cotton exporters to agree on a no Trading Corporation of Pakistan (TCP) intervention in the free market mechanism. TCP, therefore, is not likely to intervene as the ministry was convinced by the participants. It may be noted that the proposal of PCGA for lifting of their remaining cotton stocks through TCP amidst falling prices was pending with the textile ministry.
The participants of the meeting argued that as of 15th December 2011, as many as 11 million bales of cotton had arrived, which would further increase by 31st December 2011 to around 12.2 million bales. They pointed out crop lifting data suggests that 95 per cent of the cotton crop, estimated to be 12.58 million bales, would be out of the hands of the cotton farmers. Therefore, the intervention would not yield any benefit and if so, would benefit only cotton hoarders. APTMA Chairman Mohsin Aziz cotton prices surged abnormally to $2.2 per kg last year, but APTMA did not ask for government intervention for a single day and instead fought for continuity of free market mechanism. Right now, he added, fall in cotton prices is a global phenomenon and APTMA has nothing to do with tumbling cotton prices, therefore, PCGA’s propaganda of manipulating the market by APTMA was baseless. It is not the manipulation, but the speculation of a few ginners that had created fuss recently, he said. He added, TCP’s intervention, if inevitable in any case should be broad-based and APTMA should also be allowed to bid for TCP’s tender against 4.5 million stocks with industry at present. There should be an equal opportunity for every stakeholder to avail the opportunity at the cost of exchequer and no discrimination should be made by the government, he underscored. He said the textile industry was passing through severe energy crisis and it would prefer to sell its stocks to TCP rather converting it into yarn on heavy losses.