China Imports Rise More than Expected
2026-06-09 02:41
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
China’s imports soared 27.4% yoy to USD 271.35 billion in May 2026, accelerating from a 25.3% growth in April and topping market forecasts of 25%.
It was the 12th month of growth in purchases, boosted by solid domestic demand despite rising cost pressures from supply chain disruptions and elevated energy costs due to the war in the Middle East.
A relatively low base from a year earlier also helped lift the annual pace of expansion.
Over the first six months of the year, imports jumped 24.5% to USD 1,261.69 billion, buoyed by robust demand from ASEAN (21.0%), the EU (8.6%), Japan (27.8%), Hong Kong (173.2%), and South Korea (56.5%), but fell from the U.S.
(-5.5%).
Imports of ADP equipment surged 65.1%, while purchases of semiconductors and circuits each rose 11.5% and 52.1%.
Volume increases were seen for edible oils (24.2%), copper ore (36.7%), refined oil (6.74%), rare earths (40.6%), and unwrought copper (26.1%), but dropped for natural gas (-10.1%), coal (-2.9%), and steel (-8.5%).