China's exports seen rising more quickly in June amid fresh tariff
fears: Reuters poll
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[July 10, 2024] By
Joe Cash
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's exports likely grew at the fastest pace in
fifteen months in June, as manufacturers front-load shipments in
anticipation of tariffs from a growing number of the country's major
export markets.
Trade data on Friday is expected to show exports grew 8.0% year-on-year
by value, according to the median forecast of 31 economists in a Reuters
poll, up from the 7.6% increase in May and the best pace since a 10.9%
gain in March last year.
Imports likely grew 2.8% last month, faster than the 1.8% gain seen in
May, suggesting factory owners are buying more parts to be turned into
finished goods for export.
Stronger-than-expected exports have been one of the few bright spots for
an economy that is otherwise still struggling for momentum despite
officials' efforts to stimulate domestic demand following the pandemic.
A prolonged property slump and worries about jobs and wages are weighing
heavily on consumer confidence.
The $18.6 trillion dollar economy is so overwhelmingly competitive
across so many sectors, including steel, solar and consumer goods, that
even new trade restrictions wouldn't really slow the export juggernaut,
analysts say.
Still, as the number of countries considering stepping up curbs on
Chinese goods increases, so too does the pressure on its exports to prop
up progress towards the government's economic growth target for this
year of around 5%.
Washington in May hiked tariffs on an array of Chinese imports,
including a quadrupling of duties on Chinese electric vehicles to 100%,
while Brussels last week confirmed it would also impose tariffs, but
only up to 37.6%.
Exporters are also on edge heading into U.S. elections in November in
case either major party tips fresh trade restrictions.
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An aerial view shows containers and cargo vessels at the Qingdao
port in Shandong province, China May 9, 2022. Picture taken with a
drone. China Daily via REUTERS/File Photo
Turkey last month also announced it would impose a 40% additional
tariff on Chinese-made EVs, while Canada said it was considering
curbs.
Meanwhile, Indonesia plans to impose import duties of up to 200% on
textile products, which China is its biggest supplier of, India is
monitoring cheap Chinese steel, and talks with Saudi Arabia over a
free trade agreement have reportedly stalled over dumping concerns.
A global cyclical upturn in the electronics sector should also help
exporters in the world's No.2 economy, which is investing heavily in
expanding production of older chips, known as legacy chips, that can
be found in everything from smartphones to fighter jets.
South Korean exports to China - a leading indicator of China's tech
imports - jumped 16.8% last month.
The European Commission has reportedly began canvassing the bloc's
semiconductor industry for its views on China's expanded production
of legacy chips, which could constrain the Asian giant's strong
export performance in electronics.
The median estimate in the poll predicted China's trade surplus will
come in at $85.0 billion, up from 82.62 billion in May.
(Reporting by Joe Cash; Polling by Rahul Trivedi and Devayani
Sathyan in Bengaluru; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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