China warned yesterday of a “grim” outlook for trade as the world’s second-largest economy surprised financial markets by reporting a fall in exports and imports when both had been expected to rise.
The figures, which follow a government crackdown on the use of fake invoicing that had exaggerated exports earlier this year, are likely to raise fresh concerns about the extent of the slowdown in the economy and global demand.
Last month’s data, showing that exports fell 3.1 percent from a year earlier and imports dropped 0.7 percent, may now reflect the true trade picture, customs officials said.
“China faces relatively stern challenges in trade currently,” customs spokesman Zheng Yuesheng (鄭躍聲) told a news briefing. “Exports in the third quarter look grim.”
The customs agency said exporters were losing confidence in the face of weak overseas demand, rising labor costs and a strong yuan. The Australian dollar briefly fell about a third of a cent after the China data, reflecting worries about Chinese demand for Australia’s commodities, such as iron ore and coal.
The MSCI Asia Pacific excluding Japan Index was up 0.5 percent after gaining as much as 1.2 percent to a one-week high before the trade figures came out.
The export fall was the first since January last year.
Economists had expected exports to increase by 4 percent and imports to rise by 8 percent.
China’s trade data is volatile and has been distorted by speculative capital flows across the country’s border. Doubts about the accuracy of the figures had abated slightly since the customs office and top foreign exchange regulator launched a campaign in May to crack down on fake export invoices.
Fake invoicing inflated China’s official import and export totals by US$75 billion in the first four months of this year, local media reported on June 14, citing an internal review by China’s commerce ministry.
The customs data showed that exports to the US, China’s biggest export market, fell 5.4 percent, while exports to the EU dropped 8.3 percent.
“The surprisingly weak June exports show China’s economy is facing increasing downward pressure on lackluster external demand,” Shanghai-based Shenyin Wanguo Securities (申銀萬國證券) economist Li Huiyong (李慧勇) said.
“Exports are facing challenges in the second half of this year. The appreciation of the US dollar and the Chinese government’s recent crackdown on speculative trade activities also put pressure on exports,” Li added.
China had a trade surplus of US$27.1 billion last month, the customs administration said, largely in line with the US$27 billion expected by economists.
China’s reform-minded new leaders have shown a tolerance of slower growth, although they still need to avoid widespread job losses that could threaten social stability.
Economists expect data next week to show that annual growth in China for the April-to-June quarter slowed down to 7.5 percent.
A continued slide in growth could test leaders’ resolve to tolerate a short-term slowdown in the economy while pressing ahead with efforts to revamp the economy for the longer term.
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