China’s exports rose in July as economic activity in the rest of the world recovered and shipments to the U.S. jumped, while imports unexpectedly contracted due to falling commodity prices and the ongoing fragility of China’s own recovery.
Exports rose 7.2% in dollar terms in July from a year earlier, while imports fell 1.4%, the customs administration said Friday. That widened the trade surplus to $62.33 billion in the month. Economists had forecast that exports would fall by 0.6% while imports would increase by 0.9%.
“The road ahead may be bumpy as new export orders remain weak and the recovery path will be uneven across economies,” said Louis Kuijs, head of Asia economics at Oxford Economics in Hong Kong. “Imports disappointed a bit,” but as commodity prices are still down substantially from a year ago, this implies that import volumes continued to expand, he said.
Exports to the U.S. rose 12.5% in July from a year ago, the fastest rise since 2018. The magnitude of the jump is “probably due to front-loading activity ahead of a worsening U.S.-China relationship.” said Tommy Xie, an economist at Oversea Chinese Banking Corp in Singapore. Imports from the U.S. rose 3.6%.
President Xi Jinping is also accelerating his push for a more economically independent China with a new emphasis on a so-called “dual circulation” model, which tilts toward domestic markets, although it’s unclear what that will mean in practice.
Chinese factory managers saw continued recovery momentum in July. However, a set of the earliest indicators for activity in the month show that the effects of stronger market sentiment was damped by muted consumer demand.