Otago Daily Times

First China monthly trade deficit in years

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BEIJING: China posted its first monthly trade deficit in three years in February as imports surged at their fastest pace since early 2012, driven by its strong demand for commoditie­s from iron ore to crude oil and coal.

China’s February exports unexpected­ly fell 1.3% from a year earlier, but imports expanded 38.1%, well above economists’ forecasts, customs data showed on Wednesday.

That left the country with a trade deficit of $9.15 billion for the month, the General Administra­tion of Customs said.

But China watchers have cautioned that trends in January and February can be distorted by the long Lunar New Year holidays.

China’s exports for January and February combined rose 4.0% from the correspond­ing period last year, while imports surged 26.4%, suggesting there has been solid improvemen­t in demand at home and abroad.

Analysts polled by Reuters had expected February exports from the world’s largest exporter to have risen 12.3%, an improvemen­t from a 7.9% rise in January.

Imports had been expected to rise 20%, after growing 16.7% in January.

Analysts had expected China’s trade surplus to fall to $25.75 billion in February, versus January’s $51.35 billion, with attention on its large trade advantage with the United States as President Donald Trump ramped up protection­ist rhetoric. — Reuters

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