China Exports Outpace June Forecasts After US Tariff Truce

China Exports Outpace June Forecasts After US Tariff Truce

June Exports outpace Expectations as US‑China Trade Tensions Ease

The General Administration of Customs reported that China’s exports rose 5.8 % year‑on‑year in June, exceeding the 5 % forecast in a Bloomberg survey. Import growth also outperformed predictions, climbing 1.1 % versus the 0.3 % estimate.

US‑China Tariff Dynamics

  • Exports to the United States surged 32.4 % in June, reversing the decline seen the month before.
  • Capital Economics’ Zichun Huang noted that the trade truce helped boost export values, though high tariffs remain a constraint.
  • Pinpoint Asset Management’s Zhiwei Zhang highlighted a strategy of frontloading shipments to anticipate future tariff increases.

Implications for Economic Growth

The robust export figures are expected to partly offset weak domestic demand, keeping GDP growth around the 5 % target for the second quarter. However, analysts warn that the front‑loading effect may wane, raising uncertainty for the latter half of the year.

Domestic Demand Trends

  • Consumer prices edged up in June, breaking a four‑month deflationary dip.
  • Factory gate prices dropped at the fastest pace in nearly two years.
  • Authorities introduced subsidies to boost retail activity, but the impact has been short‑lived.

Policy Outlook

China aims for a 5 % expansion in 2025, a target considered ambitious by many experts. The government’s current measures focus on shifting the growth engine toward domestic consumption rather than traditional drivers of infrastructure, manufacturing, and exports.