The Philippine Star

Asia showing signs of export weakness

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HONG KONG (Reuters) – Manufactur­ing activity remained relatively solid in major Asian economies such as China and Japan in April, but exports showed signs of weakness across the region, a worrying developmen­t given heightened Sino-US trade tensions.

High-level US and Chinese officials meet in China this week, with trade expected to be top of the agenda as both sides have threatened reciprocal tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of imports.

The meetings’ outcome could be crucial for the outlook for Asian exporters as Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) surveys of factory activity are already pointing to a slowdown.

“What we’re seeing is a cyclical soft patch in exports after a very strong rise last year,” said Dong Chen, senior Asia economist at Pictet Wealth Management.

“Without considerin­g the potential trade war, we’re not very worried about it, we think it’s fairly normal. But if we think about the trade war ... then the outlook is quite uncertain. It could potentiall­y bring more damage going forward.”

Tensions between the US and China escalated earlier this year, when President Donald Trump threatened tariffs on up to $150 billion of Chinese goods to punish China over unfair joint-venture and intellectu­al property practices.

China, which denies allegation­s it coerces technology trans- fers through these channels, has threatened equal retaliatio­n, including tariffs on US soybeans and aircraft.

A Trump administra­tion delegation including Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and advisers Peter Navarro and Larry Kudlow is heading to China for talks.

Ross said on Tuesday Trump was prepared to levy tariffs if the delegation did not reach a settlement to reduce trade imbalances. Lighthizer said he was not looking to negotiate changes to China’s state-driven economic system, but would seek to expose it to more foreign competitio­n.

“The agreement to talk, even if not yet to begin formal negotiatio­ns, is ... a step in the right direction, albeit one that brings a risk of negative market reaction when followed by inevitable disappoint­ment as talks enter a more protracted phase,” said Jon Harrison, managing director for emerging markets macro strategy at TS Lombard.

The momentum in global trade, which has been responsibl­e for much of the world’s growth in the past year or two, may be already weakening, as firms that are part of supply chains that could be hit by tariffs may be ordering fewer components for products they sell overseas, some analysts say.

China’s Caixin/Markit PMI climbed to 51.1 in April from a fourmonth low of 51.0 in March, and topped economists’ forecast for a modest slowdown to 50.9.

The survey’s findings suggested continued strength in the domestic economy, where consumptio­n was a major growth driver in the first quarter.

But a sub-index on export orders shrank for the first time since November 2016. An official PMI survey on Monday also showed external orders slowed last month.

Japan saw a similar trend. The Markit/Nikkei PMI rose to 53.8 in April versus a flash reading of 53.3 and a final 53.1 in the previous month. But growth in export orders slowed sharply to only marginal levels due to a stronger yen.

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