does not get out of hand.
The central People’s Bank of China has cut interest rates twice since November and reduced two times the amount of cash banks must keep in reserve, along with other measures to inject liquidity into the market.
April’s trade figures followed a 15.0 percent year-on-year decrease in exports in March, and a 3.3 percent drop in January.
February overseas shipments increased by 48.3 percent, mainly due to seasonal distortion around the Lunar New Year holiday.
ANZ economists expected prolonged difficulties ahead for international commerce as other industry-related data remain weak. “As the port throughput data remain soft, we continue to see strong headwinds in China’s trade sector in the foreseeable future,” they said in a report.
Authorities are expected to introduce incentives such as tax cuts and more interest rate reductions, ANZ said. “It is likely that China needs to add targeted stimulus on both fiscal and industrial sectors.”
Beijing cut its trade growth target for this year to about 6.0 percent, from the 7.5 percent goal set for last year. Actual trade expanded 3.4 percent in 2014, the third consecutive time the annual target was missed.
Julian Evans-Pritchard, an economist with research firm Capital Economics, cautioned that unlike previous weakening in imports caused by falling commodity prices, April’s contraction was “at least partly driven” by lower incoming volumes, suggesting “the ongoing slowdown in investment, particularly property, has further weighed on domestic demand”.
But he was optimistic about the outlook for Chinese trade, citing likely stable demand in foreign markets and a recovery in international commodity prices. “We expect negative export growth to prove short lived,” he wrote in a note.
But while slowing investment growth will remain a drag, he said, import growth should begin to gradually recover as the price of many key commodities “appears to have bottomed out”.