re: Ann: Srong DSO results from northern end ...
Record for Chinese exports August 11, 2010
CHINA'S trade surplus reached an 18-month high as exports rose to a record and import gains slowed, adding pressure on officials to allow faster appreciation of the yuan and signalling a diminished contribution to global growth.
The gap surged 170 per cent from a year earlier to $US28.7 billion, the customs bureau said, exceeding the forecasts of all 29 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Exports increased 38.1 per cent to $US145.5 billion and imports advanced 22.7 per cent to $US116.8 billion, the bureau said yesterday.
Premier Wen Jiabao's government has limited the yuan's rise to less than 1 per cent since ending a two-year peg to the dollar, and today's report may stoke criticism by United States lawmakers three months before mid-term elections. The slowest pace of import growth in nine months contributed to a slide in Asian stocks.
''The pressure on the renminbi is still on the upside,'' said Wang Tao, a Beijing-based economist at UBS AG, who forecasts the currency, known also as the yuan, to post a 4 per cent increase for the year. Meanwhile, government efforts to rein in polluting industries and dampen overheated investment spending mean domestic demand is slowing in China, she said.
BLOOMBERG
GIR Price at posting:
$2.35 Sentiment: LT Buy Disclosure: Held