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UK retailers paying in yuan
By Cecily Liu and Zhang Chunyan
Jan 13 2012 8:30
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Xinhua
A shop assistant accepts a China UnionPay bank card at a Selfridges' store in London. Many British retailers choose to pay their Chinese suppliers in yuan.

LONDON - A growing number of British retailers are paying their Chinese suppliers in yuan.

"Businesses have been talking about the possibility of paying in local currency since the yuan's peg was relaxed in June 2010," Sam Ford, head of Risk Solutions at Barclays Capital, told China Daily in an exclusive interview.

But it is only in recent weeks that the talk has turned into trades for Barclays' clients, Ford added.

According to Barclays Capital, the investment banking division of Barclays PLC, more British retailers are paying in yuan to achieve cost savings of up to 8 percent.

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    With the yuan having appreciated at least 7 percent against the dollar since June 2010, Chinese suppliers commonly embed a "buffer" into dollar-denominated contracts to guard against further yuan appreciation.

    "There was a growing number of companies switching to yuan for trade settlements in the third quarter of 2011, showing that businesses are now more comfortable with this payment method," Michael Vrontamitis, regional head of product management of Northeast Asia at Standard Chartered Bank PLC, noted.

    It makes more sense for businesses that have subsidiaries in China to carry out yuan-denominated cross-border trade transactions, particularly if they have two-way trade flows, so they can net off their transactions and significantly cut their foreign-exchange costs, Vrontamitis added.

    This is especially so for the garment industry, which typically signs contracts six to eight months ahead of product delivery, during which time exchange rates can change dramatically.

    With currency risks eliminated for Chinese suppliers, they would be more willing to give UK customers better deals.

    Even marginal profit gains achieved in this way could prove life-saving for some UK clothing retailers. The industry experienced its largest year-on-year fall in sales last autumn since August 2009, according to a British Retail Consortium report.

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