Quick Take: PVC Makers Fined $68 Million for Price-Fixing

China’s main economic planning body said Wednesday it has fined 18 makers of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) 457 million yuan ($68.8 million) for running “monopolistic agreements.”
The companies colluded to lift prices 13 times between March and December 2016, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said Wednesday.
PVC is a type of plastic widely used in construction, medical devices and home appliances.
The companies involved – which combined produced 1.2 million tons, or 75%, of all domestic PVC – violated China’s Anti-Monopoly Law, the NDRC said in a statement.
The group was led by Hubei Yihua Group Co. Ltd., China National Salt Industry Corp. and Jilantai Salt Chemical Group Co. Ltd., the commission said.
The NDRC began investigating the companies after it received a complaint from a whistleblower earlier this year. The commission found that the 18 companies reached price-rise agreements via group chats on WeChat, a popular messaging app widely used in China.
It is not clear how the NDRC obtained records of the group chats.
The actions by the 18 companies have harmed “market competition order, downstream companies and consumer rights,” the NDRC said.
Shares of Hubei Yihua’s Shenzhen-listed arm — Hubei Yihua Chemical Industry Co. Ltd. — declined 2.31% to 5.91 yuan on Thursday.
Contact reporter Coco Feng (renkefeng@caixin.com)


- Sign In
- Cancel
- Remember me
- Forgot Password
- Don't have an account? Create one
- 1Power To The People: Pintec Serves A Booming Consumer Class
- 2Largest hotel group in Europe accepts UnionPay
- 3UnionPay mobile QuickPass debuts in Hong Kong
- 4UnionPay International launches premium catering privilege U Dining Collection
- 5UnionPay International’s U Plan has covered over 1600 stores overseas