China trade surplus tops $1 trillion for first time on non-US growth
Reuters, Beijing
Published: 08 Dec 2025, 10:43 PM
Illustration: Vectorstock
China's trade surplus topped $1 trillion for the first time
as manufacturers seeking to avoid President Donald Trump's tariffs shipped more
to non-US markets in November, with exports to Europe, Australia and Southeast
Asia surging.
Shipments to the United States dropped by close to one-third
from the same month a year before.
"The tariff cuts agreed under the US-China trade truce
didn't help to lift shipments to the US last month, but overall export growth
rebounded nonetheless," said Zichun Huang, China economist at Capital
Economics. "We expect China's exports will remain resilient, with the
country continuing to gain global market share next year."
"The role of trade rerouting in offsetting the drag
from US tariffs still appears to be increasing," she added.
Chinese exports overall grew 5.9% year-on-year in November,
customs data on Monday showed, a reversal from October's 1.1% contraction, and
beating a 3.8% forecast in a Reuters poll.
Imports were up 1.9%, compared with a 1.0% uptick in
October. Economists had expected a 3.0% increase.
China's trade surplus was $111.68 billion in November, the
highest since June and up from $90.07 billion recorded the previous month. That
was above a forecast of $100.2 billion.
The trade surplus for the 11 months of the year topped $1
trillion for the first time.
China has stepped up efforts to diversify its export markets
since Trump won November 2024's US election, pursuing closer trade ties with
Southeast Asia and the European Union. It has also leveraged Chinese firms'
global footprint to establish new production hubs for low tariff access.
Chinese shipments to the United States dropped 29%
year-on-year in November, while exports to the European Union grew an annual
14.8%. Shipments to Australia surged 35.8%, and the fast-growing Southeast
Asian economies took in 8.2% more goods over the same period.
Tumbling exports to the US came despite news that the
world's two biggest economies had agreed to scale back some of their tariffs
and a raft of other measures after Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping met
in South Korea on October 30.
The average US tariff on Chinese goods stands at 47.5%, well
above the 40% threshold that economists say erodes Chinese exporters' profit
margins.
"Electronic machinery and semiconductors seem to be key
(to higher exports)," said Dan Wang, China director at Eurasia Group.
"There is a shortage in lower-grade chips and other electronics, which
meant prices jumped, and Chinese companies going global have been importing all
kinds of machinery and other inputs from China."
Key meetings eyed amid US-China trade uncertainty
China's yuan firmed on Monday, off the back of the
stronger-than-expected export data, with investors also awaiting policy signals
from key year-end meetings.
The Politburo, a top decision-making body of the ruling
Communist Party, pledged on Monday to take steps to expand domestic demand, a
shift analysts say is crucial for weaning the $19 trillion economy away from
reliance on exports.
Top officials are also expected to convene for the annual
Central Economic Work Conference in the coming days to set key targets and
outline policy priorities for next year.
Economists estimate that diminished access to the US market
since Trump returned to the White House has reduced China's export growth by
roughly 2 percentage points, equivalent to around 0.3% of GDP.
October's unexpected downturn, following an 8.3% surge the
month prior, signalled that Chinese exporters' tactic of front-loading US-bound
shipments to beat Trump's tariffs had run its course.
Although Chinese factory owners reported an improvement in
new export orders in November, they were still in contraction, underscoring
continued uncertainty for manufacturers as they struggle to replace demand in
the absence of US buyers.
An official survey tracking broader factory activity showed
that the sector contracted for an eighth consecutive month.
Domestic demand still soft
China's rare earth exports jumped 26.5% month-on-month in
November, the first full month after Xi and Trump agreed to speed up shipment of
the critical minerals from the world's largest refiner.
The nation's soybean imports are also poised for their
best-ever year, as Chinese buyers, who had shunned US purchases for the
majority of this year, stepped up purchases from American growers in addition
to large purchases from Latin America.
Overall, China's domestic demand remains soft due to a
prolonged property downturn.
That weakness was seen in a decline in imports of unwrought
copper, a key material in construction and manufacturing.
"China's pivot to establishing domestic demand as a key
driver of growth will take time, but it’s essential for China to move into the
next phase in its economic development," said Lynn Song, ING's chief
economist for Greater China.