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TRADE WARS
France eyes becoming trading hub for China yuan
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong, China (AFP) April 26, 2013


Paris has what it takes to become the eurozone's main offshore trading hub for the Chinese yuan, French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said in Hong Kong on Friday.

Moscovici told an audience of Chinese businessmen that the currency, also known as the renminbi (RMB), "has taken on a growing role on the international stage".

"The Paris financial market has exactly what it takes to become the main RMB offshore market within the eurozone," he said.

Beijing has campaigned to increase the international use of the yuan and Hong Kong has been the main centre for the business. But the southern Chinese city is facing growing competition from centres including London, currently Europe's main trading hub for the currency.

Moscovici also noted that the Parisien financial centre "plays a prominent role in the trade and investment flows between China and French-speaking Africa", a continent in which the Asian giant has made a huge investment push.

France is looking to increase trade and investment links with the growing Chinese market and drum up anaemic rates of growth in the eurozone's number-two economy.

China tells France it wants more balanced trade
Shanghai (AFP) April 26, 2013 - French President Francois Hollande wrapped up a two-day visit to China Friday, confident that France could achieve more balanced trade with the world's second largest economy.

Hollande became the first Western leader to meet China's new president Xi Jinping and picked up a deal potentially worth billions for 60 new Airbus aircraft.

France runs a 26-billion-euro ($34 billion) trade deficit with China and Hollande said Beijing "responded perfectly to the requests that we made".

On the second and final day of his visit, his first to China, Hollande met Premier Li Keqiang.

"China is not looking for a trade surplus but wants to import more French goods," Li said, according to a source close to the delegations.

China's rapid development, far from scaring France, presented a "significant opportunity", Hollande said, urging Beijing to ease market access.

France accounts for just 1.3 percent of China's foreign trade compared with around five percent for Germany but Hollande said the food industry and urban development could help diversify cooperation from its traditional aviation and nuclear sectors.

Jean-Pierre Raffarin, a former prime minister travelling with Hollande, said the visit had been very useful and would contribute to narrowing France's trade deficit with China.

On Thursday, the first day of Hollande's visit, the two sides announced a lucrative deal for 60 Airbus planes.

The deal, signed in the presence of Hollande and Xi, was part of the French leader's attempt to press China to help reduce its trade surplus with France.

China's pact with Airbus could be worth at least $7.7 billion at list prices, although customers generally negotiate discounts from plane manufacturers.

The French president later vowed to remove obstacles to Chinese investment in France as he vies to drum up anaemic rates of growth in the eurozone's number-two economy.

Hollande told a press conference Thursday that during his talks with Chinese leaders he also raised the issue of Tibet and human rights, with all topics discussed in a "frank and respectful manner".

He said such discussions were not the only purpose of his trip, and that they wanted to talk about political partnership, the Chinese presence in Europe and economic growth.

On Friday, Hollande highlighted the importance of cooperation between the two countries on a range of issues.

"The world needs China and France to deepen regulations, strengthen certain procedures, govern the planet better and to resolve certain conflicts or stave off threats," Hollande told Li.

"We are, like China, aware that we must fight against global warming."

A French source said that both countries' finance ministers would begin to hold regular dialogue, which would provide a forum for discussing sensitive issues such as the view -- shared by Paris -- that China's yuan is undervalued.

Hollande had lunch with Xi on Friday with their respective partners, Valerie Trierweiler and Peng Liyuan -- both women credited with bringing glamour to their career-politician other halves.

Both Hollande and Trierweiler described the lunch as "friendly".

Twice-divorced former journalist Trierweiler made waves in France by winning Hollande away from the mother of his four children while Peng, a popular soprano who carries the rank of general, was until recent years far better known than Xi.

Speaking to students in Shanghai, Hollande said stronger ties between the European Union and China were essential to both sides.

Europe is "the world's top economic power... China's top trade partner and the main destination for Asian exports," Hollande said.

"There will be no recovery in Europe without China, without Asia, and there will be no sustainable development in China without Europe," he said.

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