World
China trade surplus
Sherwood News

China’s trade surplus just keeps growing, as the world prepares for Trump 2.0

“Made in China” is reaching a whole new meaning

11/11/24 12:27PM

China’s trade surplus is hitting record highs, with customs data from the world’s second-largest economy showing that its export-heavy economy is more export-heavy than ever before.

The difference between the value of goods imported and exported in China surged to $785 billion in the first 10 months this year, the highest on record for that period and an increase of almost 16% from 2023, per Bloomberg. That is an imbalance that won’t have gone unnoticed by the newly elected Trump administration, which has previously discussed slapping tariffs of 60% or more on shipments from China during the campaign — indeed, Google searches for the word “tariff” have soared in the last week (chart here).

The case of China’s ballooning trade surplus is partly a short term story of how manufacturers ramped up shipments ahead of the busy season, and some potentially anticipating tariffs in the event of a Trump victory as exports soared in October ahead of economists' expectations. 

But this is really just a continuation of a bigger trend, as China has been increasingly relying on exports to compensate for the weakness of its domestic demand, with imports down 2.3% last month. The slowing economy, weak consumer spending, and China’s middle class becoming increasingly satisfied with domestic alternatives all seem to have contributed towards declining import demand. Brad Setser, a Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, summarized in a post on X: “[The] overall story is of an economy that is again growing off exports”.

If — or perhaps more accurately given the rhetoric, when — Trump’s administration do announce more details on planned tariffs, analysts expect Beijing to respond with more stimulus and a sharp depreciation of the renminbi; China’s central bank set its official exchange rate against the dollar at the lowest level in a year on Thursday.

More World

See all World
world

The US Economic Policy Uncertainty Index is the highest it’s ever been — pandemic excluded

We’ve all heard a lot about how much “uncertainty” the Trump tariff announcements, reversals, and re-announcements have been creating, but how can we actually quantify what’s been happening?

Looking at the market reaction, which — until today — has mostly presented itself as a momentum reversal that’s hit tech stocks hardest, is one way. Other ways would be to check the VIX, a measure of the expected 30-day volatility for the S&P 500, or to look at what economists are forecasting, with Goldman Sachs’ chief economist cutting his US GDP forecasts yesterday from 2.4% to 1.7% for this year. An additional measure that’s helpful to check in with is the Economic Policy Uncertainty Index, a series of indexes created by researchers from Northwestern, Stanford, and the University of Chicago, to quantify based on mentions of words like “economic uncertainty.”

Using the daily measure of that index, and then taking a seven-day rolling average, reveals that the index has only ever been more elevated during the pandemic — when Covid dropped us all into truly unprecedented times.

world
Tom Jones
3/6/25

Michael Bloomberg is America’s top philanthropist for the second year in a row

The media mogul reportedly gave away $3.7 billion to charitable causes last year, per the 2024 Philanthropy 50 report. He explained to The Chronicle of Philanthropy, the organization that compiles the list each year, “I’ve never understood people who wait until they die to give away their wealth. Why deny yourself the satisfaction?”

Latest Stories

Sherwood Media, LLC produces fresh and unique perspectives on topical financial news and is a fully owned subsidiary of Robinhood Markets, Inc., and any views expressed here do not necessarily reflect the views of any other Robinhood affiliate, including Robinhood Markets, Inc., Robinhood Financial LLC, Robinhood Securities, LLC, Robinhood Crypto, LLC, or Robinhood Money, LLC.