2nd LD: China's exports rise, imports drop in April
Xinhua, May 8, 2016 Adjust font size:
China's exports in yuan-denominated terms rose 4.1 percent year on year in April, while imports dipped 5.7 percent, customs data showed Sunday.
That led to a monthly trade surplus of 298 billion yuan (45.9 billion U.S. dollars), up from March's 194.6 billion yuan, according to figures from the General Administration of Customs (GAC).
The export growth in April was milder than the 18.7 percent increase in March, while imports fell at a faster pace compared with the 1.7 percent fall in the previous month.
Foreign trade edged down 0.3 percent year on year to 1.95 trillion yuan last month and that for the first four months combined slipped 4.4 percent to 7.17 trillion yuan.
In the January-April period, exports dropped 2.1 percent year on year while imports went down 7.5 percent, leading to a trade surplus of 1.11 trillion yuan, widening 16.5 percent from a year earlier.
The leading index for the country's exports rose 2.2 points to 33.8 in April, with sub-indices for new export orders and managers' confidence both up from March, signaling smaller pressure on export growth in the second quarter, the GAC said.
Exports to the European Union, China's largest trade partner, climbed 1.3 percent year on year in the first four months, the GAC data showed.
In the same period, exports to the United States and the Association for Southeast Asian Nations, China's second- and third-largest trade partners, both declined 3.5 percent.
Imports of iron ore, crude oil and copper posted strong increase in the four months -- up 6.1 percent, 11.8 percent and 23.1 percent, respectively. But imports of coal, steel and refined oil fell. Endi