China's foreign trade declines, record drop in forex reserves

China's foreign trade declines, record drop in forex reserves

Latest data shows that while exports fell 6.1% year on year to 1.2 trillion yuan, compared with an 8.9% drop in July, the imports slumped 14.3% to 836.1 billion yuan

Source: PTI

China on Tuesday said its foreign trade in August decreased 9.7% year on year to about $320.8 billion amid rising concerns over the record drop of $93.9 billion in the Communist giant's foreign exchange reserves last month. Latest data released by General Administration of Customs (GAC) shows that while exports fell 6.1% year on year to 1.2 trillion yuan, compared with an 8.9% drop in July, the imports slumped 14.3% to 836.1 billion yuan, compared with July's decrease of 8.6%. Trade surplus expanded by 20.1% to 368 billion yuan in August. In the first eight months of 2015, foreign trade slipped 7.7% year on year to 15.67 trillion yuan, the GAC figures showed. Exports dipped 1.6% to 8.95 trillion yuan in the January-August period, while imports fell 14.6% to 6.72 trillion yuan. Analysts said the recent nearly 4% devaluation of yuan also helped to push up the value of exports from China, world's largest trading nation. Qu Hongbin, chief China economist at HSBC, attributed the slump in export growth mainly to sluggish external demand, especially exports to the European Union (EU) and Japan. Meanwhile, China's foreign exchange reserves fell for the fourth straight month to $3.56 trillion in August, down by a record $93.9 billion from the previous month. China, the holder of world's largest forex reserves $3,771,347 millions, has accrued its massive foreign exchange reserves by its successful exports in the past few decades. About $1.20 trillion of forex reserves were saved in American bonds. The current foreign exchange reserves mirrored a sluggish foreign trade, said Tan Yaling, dean of the Beijing-based China Forex Investment Research Institute. “The yuan began to fluctuate in August, and is not the reason for the depletion in reserves since May,” she told official daily Global Times. On August 11, the central bank devalued the yuan by about 2% against the US dollar, the biggest one-day currency devaluation in nearly two decades. “The country's accumulation of foreign exchange reserves was driven by a huge trade surplus over decades,” Tan said, adding that slower export growth for some months in the past also affected the amount of foreign exchange reserves. The sudden drop has sparked off speculation that People's Bank of China (PBC) is selling dollars to support the weakening yuan.  

September 08, 2015 | 5:35pm IST.

 

The Dollar Business Bureau - Sep 08, 2015 12:00 IST
 
Book A Demo