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China’s exports likely picked up pace in April on Iran war stockpiling: Reuters Poll

By Thomson Reuters May 7, 2026 | 10:13 PM

BEIJING, May 8 (Reuters) – China’s export growth likely quickened in April, a Reuters poll showed on Friday, as companies rushed to stockpile components from the manufacturing powerhouse amid fears the ​Iran war could push input costs even higher.

Outbound shipments are ‌expected to have grown 7.9% year-on-year in U.S. dollar terms, according to the median forecast of 22 economists, up from the 2.5% increase recorded in March. The data will be released on Saturday.

Chinese exporters have so far weathered the fallout from ‌the ​Middle East conflict, buoyed by overseas buyers ⁠scrambling to secure supplies, but ⁠economists warn that the longer the war drags on and energy prices rise, the greater the risk that external demand fades away — leaving sluggish domestic consumption unable to plug the gap.

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.

New export orders rose to their ⁠highest level in two years, separate factory activity data ​for April showed last month, while sub-indices for input prices remained elevated, ​particularly for refined goods and petroleum, coal and chemicals.

Momentum was ‌solid in the first quarter, with China’s GDP growth hitting 5% year-on-year, the top of the government’s full-year target range, and lessening the need for immediate stimulus.

But unemployment rates edged higher and retail sales – a ⁠gauge of consumption – continued to underperform industrial output.

Imports are expected to grow 15.2% on-year, easing from 27.8% in March but still rising despite a relatively ⁠high base a year ‌earlier.

South Korea’s exports to China, a leading indicator ⁠of its neighbour’s purchases, jumped 63% last month ​led by ‌semiconductors.

China’s trade balance is expected to come in ​at $83.3 billion, ⁠up from $51.13 billion in March.

U.S. President Donald Trump is expected to visit China next week for a meetingwith Chinese President Xi Jinping, a trip that could yield gains on farm trade and airplane parts but is unlikely to soften deep strategic rifts, especially over Taiwan.

(Reporting by Joe Cash; Editing ​by Kim Coghill)