BEIJING, July 14 (Reuters) – China’s exports surged in June, buoyed by demand for chips and data centre computing power to fuel the global AI boom, giving policymakers grappling with how to boost domestic demand in the world’s second-largest economy a much-needed buffer.
The stronger-than-expected trade performance shows Chinese manufacturers continued to sustain sales despite slowing growth in major economies and uncertainty over trade relations with Washington. Strong demand for AI-related technology products, front-loading of U.S.-bound shipments and aggressive pricing by Chinese exporters helped support overseas sales.
Exports climbed 27% from a year earlier in U.S. dollar value terms, customs data showed on Tuesday, their best performance in four months, outpacing the 19.4% gain in April and an 18.2% rise forecast by economists.
Imports jumped 36%, compared with a 27.4% gain a month prior, a five-year high. Economists had forecast growth of 24% for June.
“Continued export strength, mostly driven by AI, points to a better second half, coupled with a more expansionary policy mix, accelerated fiscal spending and mild monetary easing, as well as a de-escalation of the situation in the Middle East, which will benefit China through lower oil prices,” said Xu Tianchen, a senior economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit in Beijing.
“But domestic demand remains a drag. Retail sales remain pretty flat and fixed asset investment was negative last month.”
Global AI investment is providing an important cushion for manufacturers in China’s $20 trillion economy, even as disruption from the Middle East conflict and a prolonged property slump continue to weigh on broader growth.
Separate manufacturing activity data for June, released late last month, showed overseas demand was beginning to recover, but factory-gate prices continued to fall as companies cut prices to win business from customers squeezed by higher energy costs linked to the Iran conflict.
Global demand for computing data centres and terminal equipment continued to expand, China customs vice minister Wang Jun said ahead of the data release.
Imports from South Korea, a major chip manufacturer, rose 85% from a year earlier last month, the data showed, with purchases from Taiwan, another big semiconductor manufacturer, up 41.1% over the same period.
Chinese exporters got a boost as U.S. retailers brought forward orders by four to six weeks to stock up for Black Friday and Christmas sales ahead of expected tariff hikes later this year. Uncertainty remains high, however, after U.S. President Donald Trump’s May visit to Beijing failed to deliver the breakthroughs many had hoped for.
Strong exports helped propel the economy past expectations in the first quarter, but momentum has since cooled, reinforcing economists’ concerns that weak domestic demand leaves China exposed if external conditions soften, raising the prospect of further policy support.
China will publish its GDP figure for the second quarter on Wednesday.
China’s trade surplus came in at $125.6 billion in June, up from $105.4 billion a month prior.
(Reporting by Joe Cash and Yukun Zhang; Editing by Jacqueline Wong and Thomas Derpinghaus)





Comments