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    No bull in China's online china shop

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    2015-10-20 09:39Xinhua Editor: Mo Hong'e

    From November, Jingdezhen, a town in Jiangxi Province with a thousand years of history as a center of porcelain-making, will become home to China's first "ceramics exchange."

    Dealing in artwork, raw materials and equities, the exchange will set out to sharpen the commercial edge of Jingdezhen by bringing traditionally offline art deals online. It is hoped that the exchange will post an aggregate turnover of 50 billion yuan (about 8 billion U.S. dollars) and create 100,000 jobs within five years.

    RESHAPING CERAMICS

    On the sidelines of the ongoing 2015 Jingdezhen International Ceramics Fair, Zhou Jun, who will run the exchange, predicted it would transform China's ceramics industry. "We have established goals and we are confident of achieving them," he said.

    Zhou is also president of the Nanjing culture and art assets exchange. In only two years, he and his team have made remarkable progress in Nanjing, where the emphasis is on philately and numismatics. The exchange has been known to turn over more than 100 million yuan in a single day.

    "Compared to stamps and coins, ceramics have even greater market potential," said Zhou: "Currently, the price of art ceramics is determined by offline negotiation. When trade volume rises, the exchange will play a prominent role in pricing."

    With per-capita GDP approaching 8,000 U.S. dollars, investment in artwork -- a traditional practice of China's moneyed classes -- is on the up. When it comes to porcelain, authentication is a perennial difficulty for casual investors, along with forbiddingly high prices.

    Once the ceramics trade moves online, Zhou believes that routine professional authentication will follow. Investors will also be able to either possess artworks in person or keep them at depositories as a pure investment in advance of future trade.

    Nanjing University has reached a primary agreement with an American business school to train exchange staff. The first course will be open to 40 students, with half of them coming from China.

    Other initiatives include 50 centers dedicated to development of technical standards for raw materials, a logistics company specializing in ceramics and warehouses in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and southwest China.

    "There are thousands of ceramics companies scattered throughout Jingdezhen. The exchange can be the thread that strings these companies together," said Zhou. Current e-commerce in the city is primarily limited to household porcelain. Competition is fierce and profits are thin.

    FEAT OF CLAY

    Wang Gaoli is a dealer in Shapiqing clay, raw material for the famous dark red Yixing teapot. The clay is extracted from Huanglong, a mineral found only in a 2.5-square-km area in Jiangxi's Dingshan County. Exploitation of Huanglong was banned in 2005, ostensibly to protect the resource, but resulting in a drastic price hike from 10 yuan per kilogram to more than 1,000 yuan. Potters everywhere began to use fake or synthetic chemical clay, seriously disrupting the market.

    Simulated trade at the exchange began on Sunday, and Wang put Shapiqing clay on sale in hope of establishing the true value of the authentic raw material through the fledgling market.

    "Chinese people love to buy gold, the price of which has only doubled in the past decade. It is time to provide options for investors to channel capital into manufacturing," he said.

    AN EMPIRICAL TRADITION

    Wei Chuanzhong, president of the Chinese Society of Inspection and Quarantine, sees the challenge of authentication looming large. He attributes the success of the Nanjing exchange partly to specific laws on counterfeit stamps and coins. "The legal framework is much weaker when it comes to ceramics and other artwork," he said.

    What compounds the challenge, as he noted, is the tradition of empirical artwork authentication: Accuracy of authentication largely depends on the knowledge, experience and morals of the appraiser. With forgers using all possible technology to duplicate for profit, fakes might go undetected. The solution, Wei believes, is to make science and technology the keystone of authenticity, with "expert opinion" an optional extra.

    Considering no Chinese college provides scientific artwork authentication courses, Wei has been consulting with American experts, hoping to use overseas experience in forensics to combine laboratory tests and physical evidence with expert judgment.

    "Without accurate authentication, intellectual property cannot be protected, investor interest will be jeopardized and public trust compromised," he said.

    Along with the Chinese Society of Inspection and Quarantine, Wei and his team plan to establish a ceramics laboratory to study authentication standards.

     

      

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