China\'s November export\, import growth shrinks; surplus with U.S. record high

China's November export, import growth shrinks; surplus with U.S. record high

Reuters  |  BEIJING 

(Reuters) - China's exports increased far less than expected in November, apparently indicating that slowing global demand outweighed any gains from a rush to ship goods to the ahead of a now-postponed Jan. 1 increase in Washington's import tariffs.

Import growth also fall sharply in November to the slowest pace since October 2016, which signals continuing weakness in domestic demand and could prompt Chinese policymakers to increase efforts to lift it to aid the slowing

The November headline numbers came out less than a week after Presidents and agreed to a 90-day truce delaying the planned Jan. 1 U.S. hike of tariffs to 25 percent from 10 percent on $200 billion of Chinese goods while they negotiate a deal.

November exports rose 5.4 percent from a year earlier, Chinese customs data showed on Saturday, the weakest performance since a 3 percent contraction in March.

Exports had risen 15.6 percent in October from a year earlier, and a poll of 26 economists had forecast November shipments from the world's largest exporter would increase 10 percent.

Growth in imports for November slowed sharply to 3.0 percent from a 21.4 jump in October, and far missed analysts' forecast of 14.5 percent.

WEAKENED SHIPMENTS

This year, China's overall growth has been stronger than expected in almost every month. Many economists attributed strength in recent months to front-loading of cargoes to the in anticipation of even higher tariffs.

Shipments of Chinese goods on an earlier U.S. list targeting $50 billion of products have already weakened sharply, but that has been offset by a rush of shipments on a later list affecting the $200 billion, according to analysts from

Also, the Chinese yuan has weakened more than 5 percent against the dollar so far this year, helping to make Chinese products more competitive abroad.

However, a weakening global demand especially those from and might have cast shadow on the engine in November.

China's surplus with the was $35.55 billion in November, a record high and compared with $31.78 billion in the preceding month.

For trade with all countries, China's surplus was $44.74 billion for November, compared with forecasts of $34 billion and October's surplus of $34.02 billion.

On Thursday, the U.S. reported that its trade deficit in October jumped to a 10-year high, and that the deficit with that last month surged 7.1 percent to a record $43.1 billion.

(Reporting by Lusha Zhang, and Ryan Woo; Editing by Richard Borsuk)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, December 08 2018. 10:07 IST