Stronger-than-expected
growth in China's foreign trade last month has surprised the market and
prompted many analysts to look for further hints of underlying economic
strength.China's foreign trade volume climbed 10.3 percent year on year
in January to 382.4 billion U.S. dollars, marking a strong beginning
for the year, according to customs data released Wednesday.Exports rose
10.6 percent from a year earlier to 207.13 billion U.S. dollars, while
imports increased 10 percent to 175.27 billion U.S. dollars, the General
Administration of Customs (GAC) said in a statement.The trade surplus
stood at 31.86 billion U.S. dollars last month, up 14 percent from a
year ago and 24.25 percent from December.Chang Jian,Slap Bracelet chief
China economist at Barclays, called the January figures "surprisingly
strong," as the institution expected weak January trade performance
based on weak PMI export orders, a high base from last year, and holiday
distortions.According to the National Bureau of Statistics, the index
for new exports orders fell 0.5 point in January to 49.3, under the
boom-bust line of 50 for a second month in a row."Today's strong export
report could have been boosted by a rush of shipments ahead of the
Chinese New Year holiday," Chang said.The Spring Festival, or China's
lunar new year, fell on Jan. 31 this year, marking the start of a
week-long holiday for Chinese workers. The holiday began on Feb. 10 in
2013, and last year's additional working days contributed to its high
base of comparison.Overall, the data suggest that the underlying
strength of Chinese exports is probably better than we expected, Chang
said.His views were echoed by Lu Ting, chief China economists with Bank
of America Merrill Lynch.Cast iron tubsThe
strong trade growth will be positive to markets even if the quality of
January data was significantly affected by the lunar new year holiday,
said Lu.
"We
may still claim that these readings are quite encouraging and might
point to stable economic growth in the first quarter," Lu said.New data
showed that trade with the European Union, China's largest trade
partner, surged 14.6 percent to 341.19 billion yuan, while trade with
the United States, its second-biggest trade partner, rose 8.8 percent to
299.23 billion yuan.China's trade with the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations, its third-largest trading partner, rose 11.3 percent year
on year to 259.06 billion yuan, and trade with Japan rose 7.8 percent
to 170.05 billion yuan.Based on the breakdown information, Lu said the
strong exports were driven by demand from the EU and the U.S., while the
strong import growth was driven by China's commodity demand, especially
iron ore and copper.Zhang Yansheng,WoW US Level1-80 CD Key including 30 days secretary
general of the Academic Committee at the National Development and
Reform Commission, said the market was generally optimistic about
economic prospects of major economies, including the EU, U.S. and Japan,
and about steady growth in emerging markets.China's export growth will
be quite strong this year on the back of recovering external demand,
Zhang said.However, Chang said he remained cautious about exports this
year."But we will watch closely for upside surprises that suggest
underlying growth," he added."Our conservative export growth forecast of
9.3 percent this year assumes that the high base from last year
matters," said Chang.Zhang Zhiwei, chief China economist with Japan's
Nomura Securities, said in a research note that it is unclear to what
extent the strong export data reflect true strength in the economy."The
data on industrial production for January and February will be released
on March 13 and should help to confirm the actual strength of export
growth," Zhang said.
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