China’s exports beat expectations for a sixth straight month and imports posted a surprise gain in September—pointing, again, to a robust recovery that could put China back on its pre-coronavirus growth trajectory of 5% to 6%.@TByGraceZhuhttps://t.co/mygoJ0aX3k
— Jonathan Cheng (@JChengWSJ) October 13, 2020
China’s export surge is picking up speed, with outbound shipments growing nearly 10% last month. This signals more groth in U.S. imports in coming weeks. https://t.co/MAOIGte6oC via @WSJ
— Paul Page (@PaulPage) October 13, 2020
The CNY on average was pretty much at its 2019 q3 levels this q3 (Using the PBOC's monthly averages it up 1% y/y in q3) so the increase in exports in yuan terms should be pretty close to the increase in dollars ....https://t.co/B0pYOq16Nc
— Brad Setser (@Brad_Setser) October 13, 2020
China’s exports rose 10.2% in the third quarter from a year ago in yuan-denominated terms, the national customs agency said Tuesdayhttps://t.co/ty8O9oN59X
— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) October 13, 2020
For months, economists have predicted China's early advantage selling medical and work-from-home computer gear would fade as other exporters recovered. It hasn't happened yet—and Chinese exports have now topped forecasts for 6 straight months.@TByGraceZhu https://t.co/mygoIZTlEK
— Jonathan Cheng (@JChengWSJ) October 14, 2020
"Exports ⬆️9.9% YoY in Sept—quickest pace in >1yr—as #China continued to benefit from #coronavirus-fueled demand for medical equipmt & work-from-home electronics...Imports ⬆️13.2% after ⬇️2.1% in Aug"
— China Beige Book (@ChinaBeigeBook) October 13, 2020
Food & semi chip buying spree@JChengWSJhttps://t.co/chZIQOtObO