China International Trade Review - September 2010
China's trade rebound continued in September as global demand normalised as
businesses churn through inventory and consumer spending slowly edges up (but
well below trend). The September quarter saw trade rising on a quarterly basis
with all exports, imports and the trade surplus rising vs the June quarter; with
both exports and imports hitting a record high quarterly result in September.
Thus marks China's return to pre-crisis levels, but with global demand
potentially slowing - led by the subdued recoveries in Japan and the US - China
will increasingly need to look internally to drive economic growth (short of
further expanding market share of exports, and selling higher margin goods).

Of course the highlight of the September result, or perhaps more - the standout
- is the recovery in the trade surplus. The trade surplus is still relatively
low historically on both a quarterly, monthly, and rolling annual basis - but is
certainly trending upwards. It would still take a significant mentality shift or
significant global structural economic changes for the Chinese trade surplus to
turn significantly negative. But a negative trade
balance should actually be an objective in China's 5-year plan. Such a shift
would be the most sustainable for China - perhaps it would also mean that the
environmental sacrifice that China has made in the name of economic progress
could be reversed or slowed. But in any case the economic and environmental
sustainability of the Chinese miracle is a game of huge stakes that the Chinese
leadership will need to play carefully and resolutely.

The strategic implications or themes from the trade results include:
1. A continued rise in demand for imports (lead by inputs for production),
providing opportunities for trading partners at the country and firm level -
which will lead to flow on benefits to those economies and financial results
respectively.
2. A continued rise in the trade surplus, which will weigh in on global politics
and rhetoric around the so-called currency wars (providing ammo for critics, and
raising further the China trade surplus scape-goat flag for US politicians).
3. A strong recovery in volumes for Chinese exporters, which will lift profits
for those companies - and potentially lead to eventual wage rises; thus lifting
average wages and potentially stimulating domestic demand (and price pressures).
4. The broader threats and opportunities for China and its trading partners at a
country and geopolitical strategy level (in terms which direction the leadership
of China will focus policy e.g. at an economic level; trade driven or domestic
demand driven).
5. The imperative for boosting domestic demand; and the ultimate inevitability
of it. This will provide opportunities for those who serve the Chinese consumer,
whether they do so from within China (probably the greatest opportunity), or
from elsewhere.
Sources
Econ Grapher Analytics www.econgrapher.com
China Customs www.customs.gov.cn
Article Source: http://www.econgrapher.com/13oct-chinatrade.html
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