Qinchuan-Future Plastic mulls initial public offering
By Steve Toloken
PLASTICS NEWS STAFF

Wayne Song, director of one of the joint venture partners in Qinchuan-Future Plastic, said China’s domestic wood-plastic composite market is starting to develop some very sophisticated products,
including combination aluminum and composite window frames. He was displaying a window frame at NPE2009 that he said his company has applied for more than 50 patents on in China.
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS (June 30, 2009) -- Strong growth in the wood-plastic composite market is prompting joint venture Chinese wood-plastic composite equipment maker Qinchuan-Future Plastic Machinery Co.
Ltd. (QC Future) to consider an initial public offering (IPO), a company executive said in an interview at NPE.
The Baoji, Shaanxi province-based company is eyeing an IPO to raise between US$10 million and US$30 million (68.5 million yuan and 205.1 million yuan) for an expansion to handle increasing demand in
both China’s domestic wood-plastic composite market and in exports, said Wayne Song, director of Manalapan, New Jersey-based Futuresoft Technologies Inc., one of the joint venture partners in QC
Future.
The IPO would likely be in China’s new Growth Enterprise Board stock market, the country’s newly announced version of the American small-cap Nasdaq market.
QC Future makes extrusion lines for wood-plastic composite applications, including twin-screw models and turnkey systems. Its Chinese partner is publicly traded equipment maker QC Machinery
Development Co. Ltd.
Song, in a June 25 interview at Futuresoft’s booth, said the Chinese wood-plastic composite industry will have about 200,000 metric tons of production this year and could grow to more than 300,000
metric tons next year, fueled by the country’s construction industry.
The industry also is being bolstered by government stimulus spending to shore up China’s domestic economy amid the global downturn.
Song said the joint venture had about US$15 million (102.5 million yuan) in sales this year, and will likely hit US$18 million (123 million yuan) next year, and is seeing 40 percent growth in
domestic sales and 15 percent growth in exports.
He said exports to developed markets like the United States are down, but he said the company has compensated by boosting exports to developing economies, including India, South Africa and Iran, with
the latter business being handled by the company’s Beijing subsidiary.
He said the company had a booth at the PlastIndia trade fair in February in New Delhi and had a very strong response.
Song said developing economies use Chinese wood-plastic composite equipment because the machinery is inexpensive, and because the raw materials -- recycled plastic -- are inexpensive but can give the
appearance of wood products at a lower cost.
“Those markets are very price sensitive,” he said.
He said China’s domestic wood-plastic composite market is starting to develop some very sophisticated products, including combination aluminum and composite window frames. He was displaying a
window frame that he said his company has applied for more than 50 patents on in China.
He said wood-plastic composite applications inside homes in China can be more sophisticated than the U.S. market because American applications are focused on exterior applications.
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