CEO Morning Brief

China's Export Growth Jumps to 27-month High as Tariff Risks Loom

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Publish date: Fri, 08 Nov 2024, 10:08 AM
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TheEdge CEO Morning Brief

(Nov 7): China’s export growth surged in October to the fastest since July 2022, extending a months-long boost to the economy that may be jeopardised by Donald Trump’s US election win and his tariff threats.

Exports rose 12.7% from a year earlier to US$309 billion (RM1.36 trillion), the customs administration said on Thursday, significantly exceeding any economist’s forecast. Imports fell 2.3% to US$213 billion, leaving a trade surplus of US$96 billion, the third-highest month on record.

Chinese stocks extended their gains in the afternoon session. The onshore benchmark CSI 300 Index rose as much as 1.2% and a gauge of Chinese stocks listed in Hong Kong jumped as much as 1.8%. Both indices ranked among the top performers in the Asia-Pacific region.

The stream of exports has helped make up for a weakness in domestic demand, but it has also sparked a backlash from the US, South America and Europe against the influx of cheap goods. In response, an increasing number of nations have raised tariff barriers against goods such as steel and electric vehicles.

“This may partly be driven by exporters trying to front-load shipments in order to mitigate the damage of a potential trade war next year,” said Zhang Zhiwei, the president and chief economist of Pinpoint Asset Management. “I think the economy will improve modestly in the fourth quarter, but the trade war may start in the first quarter of next year. We cannot rely on exports to carry China’s economy.”

Exports to the US rose 8.1%, the most in three months. Shipments to most markets climbed, with double-digit increases to Asean, the European Union, South Africa and Brazil. Shipments to Russia jumped almost 27%, the fastest growth this year.

Trump’s return to the White House will further complicate the outlook. The president-elect has threatened to put tariffs of as much as 60% on Chinese goods, a level that Bloomberg Economics predicts will decimate trade between the world’s biggest economies.

Any new barriers would mean China might need to find new markets for the products it currently sells to the US. Last year, Chinese companies shipped US$500 billion in goods to the US, accounting for 15% of the value of all its exports.

Zichun Huang, a China economist for Capital Economics, said those levies would hurt China’s export sector, but he expects emerging markets to offset a sizeable portion of the loss in demand from the US.

“Their impact would be less significant than many fear — we think they could lower export volumes by around 3% — and may not be felt until the second half of 2025,” Huang wrote in a note.

The brisk growth in exports may help China reach its growth target of around 5% this year even before Beijing fully rolls out a barrage of stimulus measures aimed at shoring up domestic demand.

Over the past six weeks, Beijing has announced measures to boost the economy, starting with direct support for the stock and housing markets and likely to continue with financial support for indebted local governments expected within days.

But until domestic demand perks up, Chinese companies in many industries are dealing with overcapacity that has been forcing them to cut prices. Export prices have been falling for more than a year, mirroring the collapse in domestic producer charges that has slashed industrial profits.

October has historically been a weaker month for exports before a final rush in the last two months of the year. The rise was off a weak base in the same period a year earlier, when shipments abroad dropped almost 7%.

Source: TheEdge - 8 Nov 2024

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