Economist at UOB Group Ho Woei Chen, CFA, comments on the recent trade balance figures in the Chinese economy.
Key Takeaways
China’s exports and imports (USD terms) both contracted in May. The decline in exports came in worse than expectation and contributes to a string of negative data indicating that China’s growth momentum has likely slowed in 2Q23.
Further contraction in exports of high-tech products such as semiconductors by a sharp -25.8% y/y suggests that the outlook for the electronics sector has remained weak. Shipments of consumer goods such as handbags, clothing and footwear also weakened in May.
Imports of motor vehicles, plastics, electronics and computers led the drop in May while aircraft and energy-related imports such as refined petroleum products and coal remained robust.
Taking into account the underperformance in imports to-date as a result of more prolonged weakness in both domestic and external demand, we update our forecast for China’s imports to contract by -2.0% in 2023 (previous forecast: 2.0%) while maintaining our forecast for exports to contract by -3.0% this year.
면책 조항: 본 게시글에 표현된 견해는 전적으로 작성자의 견해이며 Followme의 공식 입장을 대변하지 않습니다. Followme는 제공된 정보의 정확성, 완전성 또는 신뢰성에 대해 책임을 지지 않으며, 서면으로 명시적으로 언급되지 않는 한 해당 내용을 기반으로 취해진 어떠한 조치에 대해서도 책임을 지지 않습니다.

더 오래된 의견은 없습니다. 소파를 가장 먼저 잡으십시오.