China Imports Climb 19.8% YoY
2026-03-10 03:22
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
China’s imports soared 19.8% yoy to USD 442.96 billion in the first two months of 2026, far above market expectations of 6.3% and after a 5.7% increase in the prior month.
It was the strongest pace of purchases since early 2022, boosted by solid domestic demand during the festive season.
Imports grew from Japan (26.5%), Hong Kong (322.9%), South Korea (35.8%), Taiwan (19.2%), ASEAN (12.9%), and the EU (11.7%), but fell from the U.S.
(-26.7%).
Crude oil imports jumped 15.8% to 96.93 million metric tons, as refiners kept throughput high and boosted stockpiles.
Imports of copper concentrates and ores rose 4.9% to 4.93 million tons, while coal purchases added 1.5% to 77.22 million metric tons.
In contrast, arrivals of unwrought copper fell 16.1% to 700,000 tons.
Natural gas imports dropped 1.1% to 20.02 million tons.
This year, imports are expected to grow modestly, helped by policy support aimed at boosting consumption, though property weakness and trade tensions may cap growth.