Iran Daily

China January exports, imports seen falling again in blow to global growth

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China’s trade engine likely remained stuck in reverse in January, with imports and exports expected to fall for the second month in a row, adding to concerns the economy may be at risk of a sharper slowdown.

China is the world’s largest trading nation, and the extent of the declines will be closely watched by internatio­nal investors and policymake­rs as anxiety grows over cooling global demand, Reuters reported.

Imports are expected to have fallen 10 percent in January from a year earlier, which would be the biggest decline since July 2016, according to the median estimate of 30 economists in a Reuters poll. That compared with a 7.6 percent drop in December.

“The weakness of imports suggested we should be alert to the possibilit­y that China’s economy is slowing more abruptly than we had been expecting,” Mark Williams, chief Asia economist at Capital Economics, cautioned.

China’s exports in January also likely contracted, though not as much. Outbound shipments are expected to have fallen 3.2 percent from a year earlier, compared with the previous month’s 4.4 percent decline.

A new round of Sino-us talks began in Beijing on Monday as the world’s two largest economies renewed efforts to defuse their bruising trade war. Negotiator­s are trying to reach a deal ahead of a March 1 deadline when US tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports are scheduled to increase to 25 percent from 10 percent.

Most analysts believe a further suspension of the tariff hike will be the most likely outcome of the talks, with existing duties expected to be left largely intact for awhile longer, maintainin­g pressure on Chinese exporters while averting a strong near-term blow.

China’s overall trade surplus is seen to have shrunk sharply to $33.5 billion in January from $57.06 billion the previous month, according to the Reuters poll.

However, analysts warn that data from China in the first two months of the year must be treated with caution due to business distortion­s caused by the timing of the long Lunar New Year holidays, which fell in mid-february in 2018 but started on Feb. 4 this year.

Estimates for both January imports and exports thus fell in an unusually wide range.

Weak tech imports

Most of the poll respondent­s penciled in a contractio­n in imports for January, with the lowest forecast projecting a 20.1 percent drop.

China’s domestic demand had already been weakening before Washington and Beijing started to impose tit-for-tat tariffs on each other’s exports in early 2018.

A multi-year regulatory crackdown on risky lending practices and debt has pushed up business financing costs and throttled access to once-easy credit, hitting a vast swathe of private companies. Investment growth at one point hit a record low.

Many analysts said the contractio­n in Chinese imports has occurred mostly in the technology sector.

Taiwan and South Korea have been the hardest hit so far, given their large exposure to China and tech. Taiwan recorded a sharper drop of orders from China in December, while South Korea’s exports shrank for a second straight month in January as faltering demand in China hit prices of memory chips.

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