China exports miss, imports surge as trade surplus shrinks sharply

  • Mixed signal, weak exports point to softer global demand, while strong imports support commodities and China-linked growth plays; overall narrowing surplus may weigh on CNY sentiment at the margin.
trade

China exports miss sharply as imports surge, narrowing trade surplus.

Summary:

  • Exports +2.5% y/y (vs +8.6% expected)
  • Imports +27.8% y/y (vs +11.2% expected)
  • Trade surplus $51.1bn (vs $108.2bn expected)
  • Yuan exports stronger due to FX effects
  • Strong domestic demand, weaker external demand

China’s March trade data showed a sharp divergence between imports and exports, with demand holding up domestically while external momentum disappointed expectations.

In dollar terms, exports rose just 2.5% year-on-year in March, well below the Reuters poll forecast of 8.6%, signalling a loss of momentum in external demand. In contrast, imports surged 27.8% y/y, far exceeding expectations of an 11.2% increase, pointing to strong domestic demand and higher commodity-related inflows.

As a result, China’s trade surplus narrowed significantly to $51.13 billion, undershooting expectations of $108.2 billion and marking a sharp contraction from prior levels.

In yuan terms, the picture appears stronger at first glance, with exports reported up 23.8% y/y and the trade surplus at CNY 354.75 billion. However, this divergence largely reflects currency effects. Yuan-denominated data captures trade flows in local currency, while dollar-denominated figures are influenced by exchange rate movements. A weaker yuan versus the U.S. dollar can inflate the local-currency value of exports and imports, even if underlying trade volumes are softer.

The data suggests that while China’s domestic demand, particularly for commodities, remains robust, external demand is facing headwinds, likely tied to global uncertainty and the energy shock stemming from the Middle East conflict.

Overall, the miss on exports alongside a surge in imports points to a narrowing external buffer, with the trade balance compressing more sharply than expected and raising questions about the sustainability of China’s export-led support for growth.

china march trade data 14 April 2026

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