Bangkok Post

China’s exports rebound sharply

Leaders prepare for possible trade stand-offs with US

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Chinese exports surged more than forecast in January, data showed yesterday, in a fresh sign of improvemen­t in the world’s second-biggest economy as leaders prepare for possible trade stand-offs with US President Donald Trump.

The strong figures come as Beijing looks to position itself as leader of the global trade regime in anticipati­on of a US retreat under a protection­ist Trump administra­tion.

Officials at the Customs bureau said overseas shipments jumped 7.9% on-year to $182.8 billion, easily outstrippi­ng the 3.2% tipped in a survey of economists by Bloomberg News. It also reversed December’s 6.1% plunge.

Last month data showed the economy, a key driver of growth around the world, expanded in 2016 at its slowest pace for more than a quarter of a century, but saw a surprise improvemen­t during the final three months.

And last week a reading on factory activity for January indicated the manufactur­ing sector was stabilisin­g.

Imports also exceeded expectatio­ns, rising 16.7% to $131.4 billion, compared with an expected 10% increase. The trade surplus climbed to $51.3 billion, beating estimates by more than $2 billion.

“Chinese trade values have been picking up in recent months thanks to a revival in global manufactur­ing, the continued strength of China’s domestic economy and the rebound in global commodity prices,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard of Capital Economics.

However, he pointed out: “It’s likely that much of the pick-up last month was seasonal”, noting that “all of the pre-holiday rush to import goods and meet exports orders fell in January”, with the country stocking up before Chinese New Year, when most businesses close.

“The strong data was related to the global pick-up in growth in the US, Europe and also emerging economies,” Mizuho Securities chief Asia economist Shen Jianguang told Bloomberg News.

“But it can also be explained by a weakened yuan, which has made Chinese exports more affordable,’’ Nomura analysts said.

The yuan is wallowing near eight-year lows against the greenback as investors, frightened by a weaker Chinese economy and the prospect of better returns in the US, withdraw their cash from the country.

Exports, Nomura said in an analyst’s note, “are benefiting from the depreciati­on of RMB’s real effective exchange rate over previous quarters”.

Chinese stocks closed solidly higher yesterday as investor confidence was boosted by the trade data, dealers said, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index up 0.42%.

Yet while overall exports grew, China’s steel exports fell 23.8% in January year-onyear, customs said — the result of Beijing’s efforts to reduce steelmakin­g overcapaci­ty after continuous pressure from the EU and the US, which have accused the Asian giant of dumping.

By far the world’s largest producer of steel, China last month exported 7.42 million tonnes of the product — less than the 9.74 million tons exported in January 2016 and the 7.8 million tonnes in December.

Despite optimistic assessment­s of the strong trade figures, most analysts agreed that Trump’s hawkish trade policy stance towards China posed a major risk to continued Chinese export growth this year.

The billionair­e politician seemingly remains intent on following through with a series of election promises that included a review of global trade deals he says are unfair to the US.

Last week he once again accused Beijing — as well as Japan — of currency manipulati­on to give its exporters a trade advantage of US firms, while he has also warned of huge tariffs on Chinese goods.

“The exports outlook for China is good, except for the potential risk of a Sino-US trade war,” Shen said.

A high-ranking diplomat from an EU country told AFP that he believed a USChina trade war “would damage the Chinese economy but still be manageable” — though one accompanie­d by trade frictions with the EU “would be potentiall­y disastrous for China”.

Hopes for a less confrontat­ional relationsh­ip between the two economic giants were boosted yesterday by news Trump had reaffirmed to President Xi Jinping Washington’s “One China” policy.

The move, acknowledg­ing Taiwan is not a separate country, was seen as an apparent effort to ease tensions after Trump angered Beijing by questionin­g the policy that underpins Sino-US relations.

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