Bangkok Post

Chinese exports snap losing streak

Imports jump 6.7% to $152bn in November

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BEIJING: Chinese exports beat expectatio­ns in November, a positive sign for the global economy, but analysts warned yesterday that of an uncertain outlook as US President-elect Donald Trump prepares to take office, with Beijing’s trade policy in his sights.

The advance broke a seven-month losing streak and marks a sharp turnaround from the previous month helped by a plunging yuan, which made the country’s goods cheaper f or overseas buyers.

Imports also beat forecasts, suggesting the world’s number two economy continues to stabilise after years of slowing growth and providing some welcome news for the country’s leaders.

Exports increased 0.1% year-on-year to $196.8 billion, beating a Bloomberg News survey of economists predicting a median 5% drop.

Rising commodity prices also lifted imports 6.7% to $152.2 billion, compared with expectatio­ns of a 1.9% fall. The trade surplus slipped to $44.6 billion in the month.

China is the world’s biggest trader in goods, and its performanc­e affects partners from Australia to Zambia, which have been battered as its expansion has slowed to levels not seen in a quarter of a century.

However, it has suffered years of slowing growth and last year expanded at its weakest rate in a quarter of a century.

The readings were a massive improvemen­t on the previous month, when exports dived 7.3% and imports fell 1.4%.

Stable overseas demand and a weaker Chinese currency helped, with the yuan sliding against the dollar to eight-year lows in recent weeks.

But analysts with ANZ warned that the “upside surprise” in exports reflected a delay in shipments from the previous two months.

“Despite today’s positive surprise, the medium-term outlook for Chinese trade remains challengin­g,” said Julian EvansPritc­hard of Capital Economics in a note.

“A broadly sluggish outlook for global growth will weigh on exports,’’ he said, “while the cooling of China’s red-hot property market will suppress demand for imported commoditie­s.’’

China also faces possible roadbumps as Trump — who has blasted Beijing as a protection­ist and has threatened to tear up global trade deals — takes office on January 20.

The billionair­e-businessma­n-turnedpoli­tician has promised to declare China a currency manipulato­r and threatened to slap 45% punitive tariffs on imports from the country to protect jobs.

As a warm up, he fired off two tweets on Sunday blasting the country’s policies.

“Did China ask us if it was OK to devalue their currency (making it hard for our companies to compete), heavily tax our products going into their country (the US doesn’t tax them),” he demanded.

“I don’t think so!”

China, which tightly controls the yuan’s movement, has in recent months steadily weakened the rate around which the currency is allowed to trade.

Last month it put it beyond 6.9 to the dollar for the first time in more than eight years as the greenback soars on expectatio­ns Trump’s plans for big spending and tax cuts could force the Federal Reserve to hike interest rates.

Beijing is struggling to prop up the yuan as capital flows out of China’s flagging economy in search of better investment­s in the United States.

To combat the outflows, authoritie­s indicated this week they are looking at relaxing restrictio­ns on foreign investment in sectors including automotive electronic­s, mining, agricultur­al and chemical production and some service industries.

China’s foreign exchange reserves plunged $69 billion to a five-year low in November, according to data released on Wednesday, as the central People’s Bank of China tried to support the yuan.

The world’s largest hard-currency stockpile dropped to $3.05 trillion, its fifthstrai­ght monthly contractio­n and the largest month-on-month decline since January, the central bank said.

Earlier Customs released figures in yuan terms that showed exports expanding 5.9% on-year, and imports rising 13.0%.

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