China exports jump more than forecast on AI boom, tariff rush
Exports climbed 27 per cent from a year earlier in June, outpacing the 19.4 per cent gain in May.
China exports jump more than forecast on AI boom, tariff rushSign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inboxExports climbed 27 per cent from a year earlier in June, outpacing the 19.4 per cent gain in May and an 18.2 per cent rise forecast by economists.
PHOTO: REUTERSPublished Jul 14, 2026, 11:38 AMUpdated Jul 14, 2026, 11:41 AMSet as preferred sourceListenBEIJING – China’s export growth topped forecasts in June as strong demand for semiconductors and a rush by manufacturers to ship goods to the United States ahead of potential new tariffs countered broader concerns about the Iran war and weakening global demand.The stronger-than-expected trade performance suggests 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 US-bound shipments and aggressive pricing by Chinese exporters helped support overseas sales.
Exports climbed 27 per cent from a year earlier in US dollar value terms, customs data showed on July 14, their best performance in four months, outpacing the 19.4 per cent gain in May and an 18.2 per cent rise forecast by economists.
Imports jumped 36 per cent, compared with a 27.4 per cent gain a month prior, a five-year high. Economists had forecast growth of 24 per cent for June.
Global AI investment is providing an important cushion for China’s manufacturers 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 in June, 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.Chinese exporters got a boost as US retailers brought forward orders by four to six weeks to stock up for Black Friday and Christmas sales ahead of expected tariff hikes later in 2026.
Uncertainty remains high, however, after US 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 July 15.
China’s trade surplus came in at US$125.6 billion (S$162.6 billion) in June, up from US$105.
4 billion a month prior. REUTERSMore on this topicChina’s growth seen weakening to bottom of official target rangeChina exports jump 19% in May on booming AI trade as shipments to US surge See more onChinaChina economyTradeAI/artificial intelligenceTariffs
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