Wednesday, 13 April 2016
China exports rise for first time in nine months
Chinese exports surged in March, the first gain in nine months and the
latest positive data out of the world’s number two economy, but analysts
warned Wednesday’s headline figure masked ongoing weakness in
overseas demand.
Official figures showing a better-than-expected jump in shipments abroad
come just days after another strong inflation reading and last week’s
surprise jump in an index of factory activity.
The results have fuelled hopes that a growth slowdown in the world’s
biggest trader in goods and crucial pillar of global trade may be bottoming
out. Investors welcomed the news, sending the benchmark Shanghai
composite index soaring 2.3 percent in the afternoon.
They also come ahead of the release Friday of first-quarter gross domestic
product data, which a poll by AFP forecast would show expansion
weakened further.
Customs said exports increased 11.5 percent on-year to $160.8 billion,
beating the 10 percent rise economists predicted in a Bloomberg survey
and snapping an eight-month streak of declines caused by waning global
demand. Exports plunged more than 25 percent in February.
But imports fell for the 17th consecutive month, albeit at a slower pace,
dropping 7.6 percent on-year to $131.0 billion, Customs said.
However, analysts pointed out that the latest figures were helped by
having a low basis of comparison, after exports plunged 15.0 percent year-
on-year in March 2015.
Zhao Yang of Nomura said in a note that shipments rose mainly because
of the “low base and calendar effect” due to seasonal distortions around
the Lunar New Year holiday, and warned that “external demand has not
improved as much as the number may suggest”.
But the pace of import declines reduced, he noted, “possibly driven by
faster investment and government spending”.
A recent pickup in electronic supply chains as new mobile phones were
launched in March may have contributed to export strength, ANZ
Research said in a note, adding that import data indicate “stabilisation” of
commodity prices.
The March trade surplus leaped to $29.9 billion, nearly 10 times the dollar
figure for the same month last year.
After decades of double-digit expansion, China’s economy grew 6.9
percent in 2015, the weakest in a quarter of a century, as its leaders try to
transition it from one driven by government investment and exports to
domestic consumer demand.
The AFP survey saw a median estimate of 6.7 percent for January-March.
– ‘Obvious obstacles’ –
Customs said in a statement that while figures for the first quarter showed
a yearly decline, seasonally adjusted monthly data were recovering.
“The import volume of major bulk commodities such as iron ore, crude
oil, and copper maintained growth, while the prices of major import
commodities remained low,” it said.
During the first three months of the year, China’s trade with the European
Union, US and ASEAN all declined.
“There remain obvious obstacles facing China’s foreign trade
development,” Customs said.
It initially gave the figures in yuan terms, which showed an 18.7 percent
rise in exports and imports slipping 1.7 percent.
Customs spokesman Huang Songping attributed March export growth to
the low comparison base as well as government policy support.
He said that free-trade agreements, improvement in the ailing
manufacturing sector, and a stable yuan exchange rate were additional
positive factors.
But he added: “The world economy still faces many uncertainties.”
Risk factors for world trade included major economies’ monetary
policies, possible competitive currency devaluations, geopolitical
conflicts, and rising protectionism, he said.
“The trade situation remains severe and complicated and the downward
pressures are still big,” he told reporters.
“But positive factors that will promote trade are accumulating,” he added,
expecting Chinese trade to “stabilise and improve” this year.
Electricity consumption rose 5.6 percent on-year in March, China’s top
economic planner said Wednesday, on higher demand from households
and the service sector, in what could be another positive sign of activity.
Investors welcomed the data with Shanghai stocks rising more than two
percent by the noon break.
The trade data “add to growing evidence that the extreme gloom of a few
weeks ago” about China’s economy was “misplaced”, economists at
Capital Economics said.
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