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China Exports Hold Up as Commodities, Base Effects Boost Imports

Published 08/02/2018, 03:16 pm
Updated 08/02/2018, 06:05 pm
© Bloomberg. A truck carrying shipping containers drives through the Yangshan Deep Water Port, part of China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone's Yangshan free trade port area, in Shanghai, China, on Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013.

(Bloomberg) -- China’s overseas shipments held up despite the stronger yuan and rising trade tensions with the U.S., while import growth surged reflecting calendar effects and higher commodity prices.

Key Points

  • Exports rose 11.1% in January in dollar terms from a year earlier
  • Imports increased 36.9%, the customs administration said Thursday
  • The trade surplus stood at $20.34 billion
  • Lunar New Year, which began earlier in 2017, may have distorted data
  • Jan. exports to U.S. rose 12.7%; imports surged 26.5% on the year

Big Picture

External demand has remained intact amid a synchronized global expansion, helping to offset the yuan’s continued surge. Still, the world’s largest exporter faces uncertainty. Trade friction between the two biggest economies has ratcheted up recently, with China probing sorghum imports from the U.S. after the Trump administration slapped tariffs on solar panels and washers, which Beijing called a "misuse" of trade measures.

Economist Takeaways

"High imports are related to base effects and rising commodities prices, which may give a lift to domestic inflation this year," said Liao Qun, chief economist at China Citic Bank International Ltd. in Hong Kong. "Dollar-dominated oil prices rise as the dollar weakens, and the growth rose again when being converted into yuan terms."

Trade friction will likely intensify this year, but a trade war is unlikely, according to UBS Group AG economists led by Wang Tao in Hong Kong. "Targeted tariffs and restrictions may hurt related stocks or sectors, but the macro impact on China’s exports or GDP growth will be very small as a stronger global recovery helps to drive 2018 export growth," she wrote.

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"China imports more from the U.S. than their shipments to the U.S. As the trade tension of the two biggest nations intensifies, this figure is timely," said Raymond Yeung, chief greater China economist for Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Hong Kong. "The Chinese side is expected to use this number to show their effort to narrow the trade gap."

"More working days would definitely have an impact," said Gai Xinzhe, an analyst at Bank of China’s research institute, referring to the holiday in January 2017. "Though the yuan is getting much stronger against the dollar, its overall rates against other currencies are relatively stable, which could explain why exports data are better than expected. Trade data in the first two months are extremely volatile and it’s better to look at the first quarter data for a better picture."

The Details

  • Crude imports surged to a record, averaging about 9.61m b/d in January
  • Stocks in Shanghai extended losses after the data

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