Exports measured in US dollars jumped 18% in July from a year ago, marking the fastest pace of growth this year, according to Chinese customs statistics released on Sunday. Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast a 15% increase. In June, exports increased 17.9%.
Imports, meanwhile, grew 2.3% from a year earlier, slightly missing expectations and suggesting domestic demand remains weak.
July’s strong export performance sent China’s trade surplus to a record $101 billion for the month, the first time it has surpassed the $100 billion threshold. By comparison, the trade surplus in July 2021 was just $56.6 billion.
“The monthly trade data shows that China’s factories continue to march towards a robust comeback from the latest Omicron wave,” said David Chao, global market strategist for Asia Pacific (ex-Japan) at Invesco.
“Despite a softening global demand backdrop, the export beat was largely driven by normalizing production activity in places like the Yangtze River Delta [region],” he said. The Yangtze River Delta, which comprises Shanghai and parts of Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces, is a key foreign trade hub.
Strong demand from Southeast Asia, Europe, and Russia propped up the exports in July. Shipments to ASEAN countries, the European Union, and Russia soared 34%, 23% and 22% respectively last month.
A weaker Chinese currency and rising prices of its exports helped boost the performance, said Larry Hu, chief China economist for Macquarie Capital.
The yuan has weakened 6% against US dollar so far this year, he said. A weak currency usually helps a country’s exports as goods become less expensive compared to articles priced in stronger currencies.
Hu also pointed out that China’s export price inflation is largely in line with the US CPI inflation.
“In July, about half of headline export growth is likely due to the price effect,” he said.
Much-needed support
The stronger-than-expected resilience of the exports sector — a key driver of China’s growth — provides a boost to its economy.
Late last month, the country’s leadership made no mention of growth targets at a key Politburo meeting, a sign that the government thinks it might not be able to meet its goals, according to analysts.
But a resilient trade sector would help offset the broader weakness.
“The strong export growth continues to help China’s economy in a difficult year as domestic demand remains sluggish,” said Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.
But cooling global demand and new Covid lockdowns in China cast a shadow over the economic outlook.
“After a period of being exceptionally strong, retail sales in advanced economies have now returned to their pre-pandemic trend,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics, in a note on Monday.
High inflation and rising interest rates also mean that demand for consumer goods is likely to weaken further in many countries, he said.
“We think that cooling global demand will soon deflate China’s pandemic export boom,” he added.
China’s domestic weakness could also persist if the country doesn’t alter its zero-Covid policy, analysts said.
Hainan, a tropical island located in South China Sea, has imposed lockdowns on several cities since late last week as Covid cases spread. That includes Sanya, a beach resort city, where about 80,000 tourists have been stranded because of the snap lockdown.