Bangkok Post

China’s exports see surprise jump

Trade surplus with US grows in Sept

- STELLA QIU GABRIEL CROSSLEY

China’s export growth unexpected­ly accelerate­d in September, as still solid global demand offset some of the pressures on factories from power shortages, supply bottleneck­s and a resurgence of domestic Covid-19 cases.

The world’s second-largest economy has staged an impressive rebound from the pandemic but there are signs the recovery is losing steam.

Resilient exports could provide a buffer against growing headwinds including weakening factory activity, persistent­ly soft consumptio­n and a slowing property sector.

Outbound shipments in September jumped 28.1% from a year earlier, up from a 25.6% gain in August. Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast growth would ease to 21%.

“Exports have continued to outperform and accelerate, even after omitting the impact of base effects,” said Erin Xin, Greater China economist at HSBC, adding that earlier shipments of holiday consumer products in light of global supply chain disruption­s “may be behind the continued strength in exports.’’

Other analysts said power rationing in September might not have affected exports yet, but could constrain production and inflate costs for Chinese manufactur­ers in the months to come.

Power shortages caused by a transition to clean energy, strong industrial demand and high commodity prices, have halted production at numerous

factories including many supplying firms such as Apple Inc and Tesla Inc since late September.

Factories in eastern provinces of Guangdong and Zhejiang, both major export powerhouse, have been asked to stagger their production throughout the week, as many owners complain

about the chaos the curbs have brought to work schedules.

Previously, factories could operate at night but now the ban is 24 hours on days of rationing, said King Lau, who helps manage a metal-coating factory in the export city of Dongguan. The factory was asked to stop using

government electricit­y on three working days this week.

However, Louis Kuijs, head of Asia economics at Oxford Economics is optimistic the export outlook in the coming quarters remains solid, despite nearterm headwinds.

“We generally expect these disruption­s to ease over the coming months, as we expect senior policymake­rs to stress growth and to call for the pursuit of climate targets on a more measured timeline.

“Further out, we think exports should be underpinne­d by the ongoing global economic recovery and a gradual easing of global supply-chain disruption­s next year,” he said.

Recent data has pointed to a slowdown in production activity. China’s manufactur­ing PMI unexpected­ly shrank in September as industrial firms battled with rising costs and electricit­y rationing.

Furthermor­e, the property sector, a key driver of growth, is reeling from the increasing defaults of Chinese developers, with real estate sales tumbling and new constructi­on starts slowing.

China’s September imports rose 17.6%, lagging an expected 20% gain in a Reuters poll and 33.1% growth the previous month.

“The breakdown showed a broadbased decline across all good types, though it was particular­ly pronounced for inbound shipments of semiconduc­tors,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics.

“Lower import volumes of industrial metals add to evidence that environmen­tal curbs and cooling constructi­on activity are weighing on heavy industry.”

However, China’s energy demand is rapidly rising.

The volume of coal imports in September rose to their highest this year as power plants scrambled for fuel to boost electricit­y generation to ease the power crunch and replenish inventorie­s ahead of the winter heating season.

Natural gas imports in September also rose to their highest since January this year.

China posted a trade surplus of $66.76 billion in September, versus the poll’s forecast for a $46.8 billion surplus and $58.34 billion surplus in August.

Trade trade surplus with the United States rose to $42 billion, Reuters calculatio­ns based on the customs data showed, up from $37.68 billion in August.

 ?? STR/AFP ?? Outbound shipments in September jumped 28.1% from a year earlier, up from a 25.6% gain in August.
STR/AFP Outbound shipments in September jumped 28.1% from a year earlier, up from a 25.6% gain in August.

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