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China’s Exports stunningly surged 23% while growth in imports slowed in March 2023

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China’s Exports stunningly surged 23% while growth in imports slowed in March 2023​

Myungshin Cho, Bloomberg News
gantry-cranes-and-containers-at-the-yangshan-deepwater-port-in-shanghai-china-on-tuesday-july-5-2022-senior-us-and-chinese-officials-discussed-us-economic-sanctions-and-tariffs-tuesday-amid-reports-the-biden-administration-is-close-to-rolling-back-some-of-the-trade-levies-imposed-by-former-president-donald-trump-photographer-qilai-shen-bloomberg.jpg

Gantry cranes and containers at the Yangshan Deepwater Port in Shanghai, China, on Tuesday, July 5, 2022. Senior US and Chinese officials discussed US economic sanctions and tariffs Tuesday amid reports the Biden administration is close to rolling back some of the trade levies imposed by former President Donald Trump. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg , Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- China’s exports in yuan terms increased at a faster pace in March, while growth in imports slowed, data from the customs office showed.

Exports in yuan rose about 23% in March from a year ago, up from 5.2% in February, according to Bloomberg calculations based on official data from the Customs General Administration released Thursday.
Imports increased about 6.3% in March from a year ago, after rising 11.1% in February.

For the first quarter, exports in yuan gained 8.4% from a year earlier, while imports rose 0.2%, the customs data showed.

China will publish monthly trade figures in dollars later Thursday, which are expected to show a further contraction in exports and imports in March. A slowdown in the global economy has curbed demand for Chinese exports, weighing on the outlook for manufacturing.

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

 
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I would be interested in exports to US which is actually trending downwards.
Also Exports as a percentage of total GDP which should also trend downwards as China GDP become bigger.
 
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Not exactly a good sign. That means domestic consumption is weak.
 
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April 13, 202312:58 PM GMT+8

China's exports stun with surprise surge on EV boom

By Joe Cash


D2ED6ANVGZJNZEMKQBNSFSBSOY.jpg

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

BEIJING, April 13 (Reuters) - China's exports unexpectedly surged for March, driven by strong shipments of solar products, new-energy vehicles and lithium batteries and as supply chain conditions continued to improve from their COVID paralysis.

Meanwhile, imports fell less than expected, with economists pointing to an acceleration in the purchase of agricultural products, especially soybeans, as proving some support.
Exports in March shot up 14.8 from a year ago, snapping five straight months of declines and much better than the 7.0% fall forecast by analysts. Imports dropped just 1.4%, smaller than the 5.0% decline forecast and a 10.2% contraction in the previous two months.

While the figures provide some relief for investors worried about the health of the world's second-largest economy, analysts doubt the strength can be sustained as demand in major economies elsewhere flags.

"China's export growth soared in March. This came as a surprise to the market," said Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management. "The positive surprise may be partly due to a low base effect - the COVID outbreaks in March last year forced many factories to shut down," he added.

Lv Daliang, spokesperson of the General Administration of Customs, attributed the upside surprise to strength in demand for electric vehicles, solar products and lithium batteries.

However, he warned conditions could worsen going forward.

"The external environment is still severe and complicated at present," Lv told reporters in Beijing on Thursday. "Sluggish external demand and geopolitical factors will bring greater challenges to China's trade development," he added.

Newly appointed premier Li Qiang told a cabinet meeting last week that officials should "try every method" to grow trade with developed economies and push companies to further explore emerging market economies, such as those of Southeast Asia.

China has set a growth target of around 5% for gross domestic product (GDP) this year, after severe pandemic controls last year knocked the economy to one of its slowest rates in decades. Last year's GDP rose only 3%.

 
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Russia and south-east Asian countries contributed most to export growth for China's export surge in March 2023​


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Without western market, China's economy has been constantly collapsing, factories are closing, hundreds of millions are losing their jobs... the end of the world is coming for China

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Not exactly a good sign. That means domestic consumption is weak.
Its ok~ let US, EU and Japan have the good sign of export shrinking. China is happy to have the bad sign Export inceasee.
 
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Its ok~ let US, EU and Japan have the good sign of export shrinking. China is happy to have the bad sign Export inceasee.
All western world plus Japan and Korea are deeply in red for their exports now, I don't see how good this sign is for them.
 
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China's March trade with Russia robust, exports more than doubled in March 2023​

Reuters
Thu, 13 April 2023 at 4:48 am GMT-4
China-Russia-.jpg


BEIJING (Reuters) - China's exports to Russia more than doubled in March from a year earlier while imports also surged at a double-digit pace, Chinese customs data showed on Thursday, despite a gloomy global economic outlook.

China's exports to Russia soared 136.4% in March to a total of $9 billion, significantly faster than a 19.8% growth registered in the first two months combined.

Imports from Russia rose 40.5% to $11 billion, also faster than the 31.3% increase in January-February.

The upbeat data on trade between the two countries comes amid slowing global growth. The International Monetary Fund on Tuesday cut its 2023 global growth forecasts to 2.8% from 2.9%, warning that financial system vulnerabilities could bring a new crisis.

During a visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping to Russia in late March, he and President Vladimir Putin referred to each other as dear friends and promised economic cooperation.

The visit came just over a year after Russia launched what it calls a "special military operation" in Ukraine, triggering sanctions by the European Union on purchases of Russian seaborne crude and coal, and a price cap agreed by the Group of Seven on Russian crude oil in December.

China, the world's top energy consumer, has saved billions of dollars on purchases of cheaper Russian oil and coal.

Chinese customs agency did not give details on Thursday of what products boosted bilateral trade.

 
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China's March trade with Russia robust, exports more than doubled in March 2023​

Reuters
Thu, 13 April 2023 at 4:48 am GMT-4
China-Russia-.jpg


BEIJING (Reuters) - China's exports to Russia more than doubled in March from a year earlier while imports also surged at a double-digit pace, Chinese customs data showed on Thursday, despite a gloomy global economic outlook.

China's exports to Russia soared 136.4% in March to a total of $9 billion, significantly faster than a 19.8% growth registered in the first two months combined.

Imports from Russia rose 40.5% to $11 billion, also faster than the 31.3% increase in January-February.

The upbeat data on trade between the two countries comes amid slowing global growth. The International Monetary Fund on Tuesday cut its 2023 global growth forecasts to 2.8% from 2.9%, warning that financial system vulnerabilities could bring a new crisis.

During a visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping to Russia in late March, he and President Vladimir Putin referred to each other as dear friends and promised economic cooperation.

The visit came just over a year after Russia launched what it calls a "special military operation" in Ukraine, triggering sanctions by the European Union on purchases of Russian seaborne crude and coal, and a price cap agreed by the Group of Seven on Russian crude oil in December.

China, the world's top energy consumer, has saved billions of dollars on purchases of cheaper Russian oil and coal.

Chinese customs agency did not give details on Thursday of what products boosted bilateral trade.

Any indication Chinese firms will increase investment in Russia and move some workers to work in Russian mines or other industrial projects? Chinese mining companies probably are ahead in certain mining technologies as compare to the Russians, and joint ventures could be profitable for both, as western investors such as Halliburton have left Russia.

Both countries have a shrinking population, which may not be a bad thing if the average citizen sees an increase in earning/living standard. For Russia if it can increase the GDP capita of its citizens from the same resource base.

While for China, it will have more work for its working class. The joint profits could go into the rebuilding of the Russian rail network, which Chinese rail companies could greatly benefit from, if they win contracts.
 
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Not exactly a good sign. That means domestic consumption is weak.
Judging from the import data, consumer goods increased by 7%. The decline in imports is likely to be caused by domestic companies replacing some foreign imports in semiconductors and electromechanical products.
 
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China's Exports To Russia Increased By 136 %

By: Asia Business Outlook Team
Published: Apr 13, 2023 03:45 PM

China Russia


Despite a bleak global economic outlook, China's exports to Russia more than doubled year on year in March, while imports increased at a double-digit rate, according to Chinese customs data released on Thursday.

China's exports to Russia increased 136.4 percent in March to a total of $9 billion, outpacing a 19.8 percent increase in the first two months combined.

Imports from Russia increased by 40.5 percent to $11 billion, outpacing the 31.3 percent increase in January-February.

The positive trade data between the two countries comes as global growth slows. The International Monetary Fund cut its global growth forecast for 2023 to 2.8% from 2.9%, warning that financial system vulnerabilities could lead to a new crisis.

During Chinese President Xi Jinping's March visit to Russia, he and Russian President Vladimir Putin referred to each other as "dear friends" and promised economic cooperation.

The visit came just over a year after Russia launched a "special military operation" in Ukraine, prompting the European Union to impose sanctions on purchases of Russian seaborne crude and coal, as well as a price cap agreed by the Group of Seven on Russian crude oil in December.

China, the world's largest consumer of energy, has saved billions of dollars by purchasing cheaper Russian oil and coal.

The Chinese customs agency did not specify which products boosted bilateral trade on Thursday.

 
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China’s exports shifting from West to Global South

Shipments to Central Asia up 55% year on year in March marking a wider switch from developed to developing world markets
By DAVID P GOLDMAN
APRIL 25, 2023

NEW YORK – Central Asian countries increased imports from China in March by 55% over the year-earlier month, beating the 35% jump in Chinese shipments to Southeast Asia reported previously.

Former Soviet republics as well as Turkey and Iran all contributed to a near-record gain in Chinese exports to the region, a focus of Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative.

China’s exports to the region have nearly tripled since 2018. The chart below includes Turkey and Iran in the Central Asian total.

China-Export-Graphic-Central-Asia-and-SE-Asia.jpg

Several factors contributed to the export boom, which included every country in the region.

China is investing heavily in energy, mineral resources and rail transport across the Asian continent, including a new rail line between China, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan scheduled to start construction next year.


The rail project, which will link China to European markets, has been planned since 1997 but only won approval in 2022, after Russia backed the venture. Russia’s need for Chinese support in the Ukraine war outweighed longstanding strategic rivalries between the two powers.

“The CKU railway is crucial to China for two interconnected purposes—to advance its geopolitical interests and to secure favorable relations with Central Asian elites for their support over Chinese legitimacy in Xinjiang (East Turkestan),” Niva Yau Tsz Yan wrote in a March 2023 commentary for the Foreign Policy Research Institute.

“Russia’s war in Ukraine has made new trade routes bypassing Russia more profitable, and a new Uzbek government is looking to expand regional and international engagement,” Yan wrote.

China-Exports-to-Ex-Soviet-Republics.jpg

Iran’s imports from China had fallen to just US$800 million a month during 2019-2022 from a 2014 peak of $2.8 billion a month. But seasonally-adjusted Chinese shipments to Iran more than doubled to $1.7 billion in March.

Chronically short of cash, Iran depends on trade credits from China, by far its largest trading partner. The March increase evidently reflected more Chinese financing, and came after Iran accepted Chinese mediation in restoring diplomatic relations with its regional arch-rival Saudi Arabia. A reasonable inference is that Iran was being rewarded for good behavior.


China’s exports to Russia continued to rise sharply, along with exports to Turkey, which acts as an intermediary for Chinese trade with Russia. China has avoided direct violation of American sanctions on Russia, but Turkey and former Soviet republics have resold sanctioned goods to Moscow. The sharp increase in China’s exports to Kazakhstan probably reflects this intermediation.

Reuters reported on March 27 that Kazakhstan “would require exporters to file additional documents when sending goods to Russia, following reports that Russian companies have been using local intermediaries to bust Western sanctions… After the West barred sales of thousands of goods to Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine, some Kazakh businesses started purchasing such items and reselling them to Russian firms.”

China’s export prowess isn’t entirely free of tensions, though. In March, Turkey imposed a 40% tariff on imports of Chinese electric vehicles (EV’s), hoping to protect a local manufacturer. The Turkish automaker Togg plans to release its first EV later this year with a sticker price of $50,000.

A comparable Chinese model, for example, BYD’s Song sedan, sells for $27,500 in China—which means that BYD would still undercut Togg’s price despite the 40% surcharge. Meanwhile, BYD has just released its $11,300 Seagull subcompact, which has no competitor in the price range anywhere in the world.

In the kaleidoscope of Central Asian politics, a myriad of local factors explains the jump in China’s influence in the region. But all of them line up like iron filings before a magnet. China’s capacity to provide physical and digital infrastructure as well as affordable consumer goods, and its capacity to finance trade and investment out of its current account surplus, explain its economic power and political influence in the region.


There’s another geopolitical consequence of China’s export prowess in Central and Southeast Asia: China’s exports to the Global South and BRICS countries in March reached a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of $1.6 trillion a year.

That’s nearly four times China’s exports to the United States and more than the combined total of China’s exports to the US, Europe and Japan, which reached a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of $1.38 trillion in March.

That represents a geopolitical point of no return of sorts, the moment when China’s economic dependence on the United States in particular and developed markets in general slipped behind its economic standing in the developing world.

China-exports-Global-South.jpg


 
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China’s exports shifting from West to Global South

Shipments to Central Asia up 55% year on year in March marking a wider switch from developed to developing world markets
By DAVID P GOLDMAN
APRIL 25, 2023

NEW YORK – Central Asian countries increased imports from China in March by 55% over the year-earlier month, beating the 35% jump in Chinese shipments to Southeast Asia reported previously.

Former Soviet republics as well as Turkey and Iran all contributed to a near-record gain in Chinese exports to the region, a focus of Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative.

China’s exports to the region have nearly tripled since 2018. The chart below includes Turkey and Iran in the Central Asian total.

China-Export-Graphic-Central-Asia-and-SE-Asia.jpg

Several factors contributed to the export boom, which included every country in the region.

China is investing heavily in energy, mineral resources and rail transport across the Asian continent, including a new rail line between China, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan scheduled to start construction next year.


The rail project, which will link China to European markets, has been planned since 1997 but only won approval in 2022, after Russia backed the venture. Russia’s need for Chinese support in the Ukraine war outweighed longstanding strategic rivalries between the two powers.

“The CKU railway is crucial to China for two interconnected purposes—to advance its geopolitical interests and to secure favorable relations with Central Asian elites for their support over Chinese legitimacy in Xinjiang (East Turkestan),” Niva Yau Tsz Yan wrote in a March 2023 commentary for the Foreign Policy Research Institute.

“Russia’s war in Ukraine has made new trade routes bypassing Russia more profitable, and a new Uzbek government is looking to expand regional and international engagement,” Yan wrote.

China-Exports-to-Ex-Soviet-Republics.jpg

Iran’s imports from China had fallen to just US$800 million a month during 2019-2022 from a 2014 peak of $2.8 billion a month. But seasonally-adjusted Chinese shipments to Iran more than doubled to $1.7 billion in March.

Chronically short of cash, Iran depends on trade credits from China, by far its largest trading partner. The March increase evidently reflected more Chinese financing, and came after Iran accepted Chinese mediation in restoring diplomatic relations with its regional arch-rival Saudi Arabia. A reasonable inference is that Iran was being rewarded for good behavior.


China’s exports to Russia continued to rise sharply, along with exports to Turkey, which acts as an intermediary for Chinese trade with Russia. China has avoided direct violation of American sanctions on Russia, but Turkey and former Soviet republics have resold sanctioned goods to Moscow. The sharp increase in China’s exports to Kazakhstan probably reflects this intermediation.

Reuters reported on March 27 that Kazakhstan “would require exporters to file additional documents when sending goods to Russia, following reports that Russian companies have been using local intermediaries to bust Western sanctions… After the West barred sales of thousands of goods to Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine, some Kazakh businesses started purchasing such items and reselling them to Russian firms.”

China’s export prowess isn’t entirely free of tensions, though. In March, Turkey imposed a 40% tariff on imports of Chinese electric vehicles (EV’s), hoping to protect a local manufacturer. The Turkish automaker Togg plans to release its first EV later this year with a sticker price of $50,000.

A comparable Chinese model, for example, BYD’s Song sedan, sells for $27,500 in China—which means that BYD would still undercut Togg’s price despite the 40% surcharge. Meanwhile, BYD has just released its $11,300 Seagull subcompact, which has no competitor in the price range anywhere in the world.

In the kaleidoscope of Central Asian politics, a myriad of local factors explains the jump in China’s influence in the region. But all of them line up like iron filings before a magnet. China’s capacity to provide physical and digital infrastructure as well as affordable consumer goods, and its capacity to finance trade and investment out of its current account surplus, explain its economic power and political influence in the region.


There’s another geopolitical consequence of China’s export prowess in Central and Southeast Asia: China’s exports to the Global South and BRICS countries in March reached a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of $1.6 trillion a year.

That’s nearly four times China’s exports to the United States and more than the combined total of China’s exports to the US, Europe and Japan, which reached a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of $1.38 trillion in March.

That represents a geopolitical point of no return of sorts, the moment when China’s economic dependence on the United States in particular and developed markets in general slipped behind its economic standing in the developing world.

China-exports-Global-South.jpg


Good, they are making the shit, the West plus Japan are not to be trusted as good partners now.
 
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