Bloomberg (September 8)
“China’s export growth slowed to the weakest in six months as a slump in shipments to the US deepened again, although a surge in sales to other markets kept Beijing on track for a record trade surplus of over $1.2 trillion this year.” The figures ‘add to the picture of fracturing global trade flows after President Donald Trump’s tariffs of 55% on Chinese exports…. By steering exports to markets outside… China has racked up a trade surplus of just over $785 billion in the first eight months of the year, almost a third more than during the same period of 2024.”
Tags: $1.2 trillion, Beijing, China, Export growth, Fracturing, Global trade flows, Shipments, Surge, Tariffs, Trade surplus, Trump, U.S., Weakest
South China Morning Post (November 7)
“China’s export growth hit a 27-month high in October, as exporters rushed to front-load orders in anticipation of potential heavy tariffs to be imposed by president-elect Donald Trump after his return to the White House…. Exports rose by 12.7 per cent year on year to US$309 billion in October, according to customs data released on Thursday.”
Tags: Anticipation, China, Customs data, Export growth, Exporters, Exports, Front-load orders, Heavy tariffs, October, Trump, White House
