BEIJING, April 14 (Reuters) – China’s export engine slowed in March as buyers chasing an AI-fuelled future ran into the hard reality of war https://www.reuters.com/world/iran/ in the Middle East, which has sparked an energy shock and complicated Beijing’s push to keep growth on track.
Outbound shipments from the world’s second-largest economy grew an annual 2.5%, customs data showed on Tuesday, a five-month low, and slowing from a 21.8% gain in the January-February period. They sharply undershot forecasts for 8.3% growth in a Reuters poll.
Imports rose 27.8%, the best performance since November 2021, compared with a 19.8% increase over January and February and forecasts for 11.2% growth.
March marks the first real stress test of whether enthusiasm for artificial intelligence – and the chips and servers it demands -could offset gloom unleashed by the global energy shock after Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the strategic waterway for the world’s 20% of oil and gas flows.
Natural gas imports for March dropped an annual 10.7%, the lowest level since October 2022, while crude imports fell 2.8%, with Chinese vessels also getting stuck in the strait.
China roared into 2026 with outbound shipments far outstripping forecasts, powered by tech exports, raising the prospect it could smash last year’s record $1.2 trillion trade surplus. The Iran war casts doubts about that trajectory.
Even China, long criticised by trading partners for subsidy-backed, cut-price manufacturing, is not insulated from the hit to buyers’ purchasing power as fuel and transport costs rise.
Still, Chinese producers may yet gain ground as buyers seek cheaper options, said Fred Neumann, HSBC’s chief Asia economist. Decades of commodity stockpiling have also helped blunt the impact of raw-material shocks on factory gate prices, he said.
China’s exports of refined oil products rose 20.5% month-on-month, totalling 4.6 million metric tons.
The figures were further muddied by the seasonal effects of a late Lunar New Year national holiday, said Xu Tianchen, senior economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit, during which factories shut as workers down tools to celebrate.
“This explains the decline across the low-value added sectors, textiles, garments, bags, toys, furniture, as they are reliant on migrant workers,” Xu said.
A high base is also a drag, after Chinese factories rushed shipments a year earlier L1N3QS044 to beat U.S. President Donald Trump’s April 2 “Liberation Day” tariff deadline.
South Korea’s exports to China – a bellwether for Chinese demand – rose 62.4% in March, led by a 151.4% surge in global semiconductor shipments on higher memory prices and robust AI-driven server demand.
March factory activity data out of China showed goods exports continued to support growth, but the war in Iran weighed on sentiment as commodity prices rose sharply, lifting input costs.
China’s trade surplus came in at $51.13 billion in March from $214 billion over January and February.
Trump is expected to visit China for a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in May, where analysts see scope for deals on farm goods and aircraft parts but little chance of movement on flashpoints like Taiwan.
(Reporting by Joe CashEditing by Shri Navaratnam)





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