Disappointing China July
imports suggest cooling domestic demand
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[August 08, 2016]
By Elias Glenn and Yawen Chen
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's exports and
imports fell more than expected in July in a rocky start to the
third quarter, pointing to further weakness in global demand in the
aftermath of Britain's decision to leave the European Union.
Imports fell 12.5 percent from a year earlier, the biggest decline
since February and suggesting China's domestic demand may be
faltering despite a flurry of measures to stimulate economic growth.
"I think (the drop in imports) is mainly from the demand side," said
Ma Xiaoping, an economist at HSBC in Beijing.
Government efforts to cut overcapacity could produce an even bigger
hit to demand in the next few quarters, Ma added.
Exports fell 4.4 percent on-year, the General Administration of
Customs said on Monday, while adding that it expects pressure on
shipments likely will start to ease in October.
That resulted in a trade surplus of $52.31 billion in July, the
biggest since January, versus June's $48.11 billion.
China's imports have now declined for 21 straight months, while
exports have fallen for 12 of 13 months, helping to drag economic
growth to its slowest in a quarter of a century.
"Signs of stronger manufacturing activity among many of China's key
trading partners has so far failed to lift export growth," Capital
Economics' China economist Julian Evans-Pritchard said in a note.
"The country's export growth is likely to remain subdued for some
time."
Economists polled by Reuters had expected trade to remain weak but
show some signs of moderating as factories gear up for orders
heading into the peak year-end shopping season.
July exports had been expected to fall 3.0 percent, compared with a
4.8 percent decline in June, while imports were seen falling 7.0
percent, following June's drop of 8.4 percent.
China's exports underwhelmed despite still-strong shipments of steel
and oil products, with the latter hitting a record. China has come
under fire from trading partners accusing it of dumping its excess
industrial capacity in global markets.
Exports to the United States – China's top market – fell 2.0 percent
in July, while shipments to the European Union – its second biggest
market - fell 3.2 percent.
While the decline in shipments to the EU actually moderated slightly
from June, economists at ANZ expect Brexit will weigh further on
China's exports to Europe in coming months.
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A shipping container is unloaded at a port area in Lianyungang,
Jiangsu province, China, August 8, 2016. China Daily/via REUTERS
Meanwhile, China's imports from the U.S. fell 23.2 percent in July
from a year ago, versus a 12.7 percent decline in June.
A more than 6 percent slide in the yuan against the dollar over the
past year appears to have done little to help China's exporters in
the face of stubbornly soft global demand and weak commodity prices.
For the January to July period, China's exports fell 7.4 percent,
while imports fell 10.5 percent, roughly on pace with last year's 8
percent decline.
China's economy grew 6.7 percent in the second quarter from a year
ago, beating expectations, as a government infrastructure spree and
housing boom boosted construction activity and demand for materials
from cement and glass to steel.
Iron ore imports rose 8.1 percent by volume in the first seven
months of the year, but factory activity surveys last week showed
domestic and export orders cooled in July, while heavy flooding in
some areas disrupted business.
While there have been mixed signals on whether China is ready to cut
interest rates or banks' reserve requirements again this year, most
analysts agree the focus should be on structural reforms.
"In the short term I think a lot of changes would depend on the
government's structural reform of state-owned companies," said
HSBC's Ma.
(Reporting by Yawen Chen and Elias Glenn; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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