China's trade slumps, threatening recovery prospects
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[August 08, 2023] By
Joe Cash
BEIJING (Reuters) -China's imports and exports fell much faster than
expected in July as weaker demand threatens recovery prospects in the
world's second-largest economy, heightening pressure for authorities to
release fresh stimulus to steady growth.
The grim trade numbers reinforce expectations that economic activity
could slow further in the third quarter, with construction,
manufacturing and services activity, foreign direct investment and
industrial profits all weakening.
Imports dropped 12.4% in July year-on-year, customs data showed on
Tuesday, missing a forecast fall of 5% in a Reuters poll and off a 6.8%
decline in June. Meanwhile, exports contracted 14.5%, steeper than an
expected 12.5% decline and the previous month's 12.4% fall.
The pace of export decline was the fastest since the onset of the
pandemic in early 2020 and the tumble in imports was the biggest since
January this year, when COVID infections shut shops and factories.
While the weakness in the value of imports reflects poor demand, falls
in commodities prices have also exacerbated the headline declines,
analysts say.
"Most measures of export orders point to a much greater decline in
foreign demand than has so far been reflected in the customs data," said
Julian Evans-Pritchard, head of China economics at Capital Economics.
"And the near-term outlook for consumer spending in developed economies
remains challenging, with many still at risk of recessions later this
year, albeit mild ones."
The yuan hit a three-week low and Asian stocks and the Australian and
New Zealand dollars, seen as proxies for Chinese growth, turned weaker
after the data.
ADDED PAINS
China's economy grew at a sluggish pace in the second quarter as demand
weakened at home and abroad, prompting top leaders to promise further
policy support and analysts to downgrade their growth forecasts for the
year.
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Containers are seen at the Yangshan
Deep-Water Port in Shanghai, China October 19, 2020. REUTERS/Aly
Song/File Photo/File Photo
The value of China's exports declined 5% year-on-year in the first
half of the year despite total cargo throughput increasing an annual
10% in the second quarter and 8% in the first, according to Fitch.
The headline import figure was worse than forecast because
"economists may be misunderstanding the price factors underlying
commodities, which dominate Chinese imports," explained Xu Tianchen,
senior economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit.
"For example, China is importing more oil but at lower prices, as a
result the volume of crude oil accelerated in July, but the import
value slowed. Similar logic holds for grains and soybeans."
Crude oil shipments to the world's biggest oil importer were 17%
higher in July than the same period last year, but fell 18.8% from
the previous month to the lowest daily rate since January, while
soybean imports in July jumped 23.5% from a year ago, off the back
of near-record production in Brazil.
Exports to the United States - the top destination for Chinese goods
- tumbled 23.1% year-on-year, while shipments to the European Union
fell 20.6%, as diplomatic tensions mount over chip technology and
"de-risking" from China.
South Korean exports to China, a leading indicator of Chinese demand
for global goods, fell 25.1% in July from a year earlier, the
sharpest decline in three months.
Beijing is looking for ways to boost domestic consumption without
easing monetary policy too much lest it triggers large capital
outflows.
The state planner last week said stimulus would be forthcoming, but
investors have so far been underwhelmed by proposals to expand
consumption in the automobile, real estate and services sectors.
(Reporting by Joe Cash. Editing by Sam Holmes)
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