China's
trade performance improved in June but still missed market forecasts,
reinforcing expectations that Beijing will have to unveil more stimulus
measures to stabilize the economy and meet its 2014 growth target.
Exports
rose 7.2 percent in June from a year earlier, the best pace in five months, but
well below a median forecast in a Reuters poll for a rise of 10.6 percent.
Imports
also missed expectations, growing by 5.5 percent versus forecasts of 5.8
percent, although they returned to positive territory after a small drop in
May.
China's
combined exports and imports edged up just
1.2 percent in first six months of
the year, data showed on Thursday.
"For
the economy to rebound in the second half of this year, we believe more policy
support is necessary due to the unsteady recovery base," said Wang Jun,
economist at the China Centre for International Economic Exchanges, a
think-tank in Beijing.
Premier
Li Keqiang said on Monday that economic growth quickened in the second quarter
from the previous three months, but added that further modest government
support measures will still be needed. Beijing has set an annual growth target
of around 7.5 percent.
Since
April, China has steadily loosened policy by reducing the amount of cash that
some banks have to hold as reserves, instructing regional governments to
quicken their spending, and hastening the construction of railways and public
housing.
Evidence
has mounted in recent weeks that those measures are beginning to have some
effect, arresting a cooldown in activity which saw growth slide to an 18-month
low of 7.4 percent in the first quarter.
The
latest Reuters poll showed the economy probably steadied in the second quarter,
with annual growth holding firm at 7.4 percent as the policy measures kicked
in.
But
economists say the recovery still appears patchy, and more stimulus may be
needed to offset the downdraft from a cooling property market on the broader
economy.
Data
on Wednesday showed consumer inflation cooled slightly more than expected in
June while producers' prices fell for the 28th straight month, signaling
domestic demand remained lukewarm.
Second-quarter
GDP along with June retail sales, industrial output and investment data will be
released on July 16.
TARGETS IN DOUBT
The
customs office expects exports to pick up in the second half of the year in
line with improving global demand, but spokesperson Zheng Yuesheng said China
will need to "invest arduous efforts" if it wants to meet its 7.5
percent trade growth target.
Analysts
think it may already be too late.
"We
think China could miss its target ...We expect combined exports and imports to
rise 5 percent in 2014 from a year ago," said Li Huiyong, an economist at
Shenyin & Wanguo Securities in Shanghai.
China's
exports were sluggish earlier this year but its trade performance has gained
traction in recent months, helped by an improving U.S. economy and as the
government gave exporters more tax breaks, credit insurance, and currency
hedging options.
Exports
to the United States, China's top export destination, rose 7.5 percent in June,
quickening from a rise of 6.3 percent in May, while those to the European
Union, the second most important market, grew 13.1 percent, compared with 13.4
percent in May.
China
posted a trade surplus of $31.6 billion in June, down from $35.9 billion in
May.
Recent
factory activity surveys, however, have shown a marked slowdown in growth in
export orders, indicating that domestic demand may have to continue picking up
the slack.
Reuters
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