Global Markets

China's 4.3% Growth: Export-Led Momentum Meets Domestic Demand Dilemma

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China's 4.3% Growth: Export-Led Momentum Meets Domestic Demand Dilemma

China's latest quarterly expansion slowed to 4.3%, one of the weakest on record, while a surge in external trade clashes with a sharp domestic consumption slump.

Export Surge: Shock Gains and Sustainability Concerns

  • An extraordinary 27% jump in exports propelled June's outbound shipments to a historic high.
  • The automotive sector hit a milestone with 1 million units shipped abroad for the first time.
  • Yet this export boom underscores a 20% GDP reliance on overseas sales, exposing vulnerability.
  • Domestic Demand Collapse: Car Sales and Retail Stagnation

  • Local vehicle sales plunged by over 16%, signalling waning consumer confidence.
  • Non‑auto retail turnover rose modestly by 3%, indicating that genuine consumption recovery remains elusive.
  • Fixed‑asset investment fell 4% between January and May, reflecting a slowdown in infrastructure‑driven growth.
  • Policy and Stimulus Outlook: Party Summit and Potential Moves

  • Beijing’s top‑level meeting is being watched for hints of fresh fiscal and monetary stimulus.
  • Prominent economists like Li Daokui warn that local governments have shifted from growth engines to bottlenecks.
  • Missing the 4.5‑5% target band may force policymakers toward a more aggressive intervention.
  • Global Context: Trade Tensions and Geopolitical Risks

  • The US‑China trade truce is set to expire in November, raising concerns over a tariff resurgence that could hit exporters.
  • The ongoing US‑Israel‑Iran conflict threatens to dampen global demand, potentially eroding overseas orders for Chinese goods.
  • While ample energy reserves cushion short‑term shocks, a prolonged global recession would weigh heavily on China’s export‑driven model.
  • Markets are questioning the durability of China’s export‑centric growth engine. The automotive export surge, juxtaposed with fragile domestic demand, may be inflating a bubble. As the ECB and other major central banks factor China’s slowdown into their liquidity frameworks, we anticipate heightened volatility in USD/CNY and EUR/CNY pairs. In the near term, any new stimulus announcement could ease risk premiums, but lingering geopolitical uncertainties and the prospect of renewed tariffs are likely to reshape longer‑term growth expectations.
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    Financial Analyst: Defne Aydın

    Jeopolitik Risk ve Avrupa Piyasaları Direktörü. Avrupa Merkez Bankası (ECB) faiz patikasını, Eurozone enflasyonunu ve küresel ticaret savaşlarındaki gümrük tarifesi (tariff) politikalarını yorumlayan otorite.

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