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China's May Trade Surplus Surges Past $100 Billion, AI Hardware and Front-loading Trend Boost Export Momentum

2026-06-09

The latest USD-denominated trade data for China in May 2026 (Q2 2026) shows that the trade surplus jumped significantly to $105.43 billion, a substantial leap from April's $84.82 billion, vastly beating market expectations of approximately $92.1 billion. Both export and import year-over-year growth rates outperformed market expectations, and the overall foreign trade scale demonstrated strong expansion momentum in the second quarter. This not only shows the resilience of overseas demand but also reflects that China's dispatching capability as a global manufacturing hub remains undiminished.

In key details, May exports denominated in USD grew by 19.4% year-over-year (better than the expected 15%), and imports surged by 27.4% year-over-year (higher than the expected 25%). Regionally, ASEAN maintained its position as China's largest trading partner. Bloomberg calculations point out that China's exports to the United States experienced an explosive year-over-year growth of over 35.6% in May, indicating obvious hedging rush orders before potential trade tariffs are implemented. In terms of product structure, mechanical and electrical products, semiconductors, and AI-related hardware became the primary engines of export.

In terms of in-depth attribution, analysts from Reuters and several foreign institutions pointed out that this strong performance in both imports and exports has clear "front-loading" characteristics. On one hand, overseas buyers are worried that geopolitical conflicts in the Middle East might push up future energy and logistics costs, thus building up inventories early; on the other hand, the structural demand driven by global AI development has kept shipments of products such as servers and semiconductor chips robust, jointly boosting the scale of the surplus in this period.

Looking ahead, in the short term (1-2 months), as the inventories of overseas clients are gradually reaching high levels, and the new export orders index in the May manufacturing PMI has retreated from its peak, this order-rushing effect may face a cooldown. It is estimated that the trade surplus will fluctuate at the high level of $100 billion or slightly converge. In the medium term (3-6 months), the pressure of global supply chain restructuring, as well as potential tariff barriers from Europe and the US against China's green energy and high-tech products, will be the biggest headwinds facing Chinese exports; however, relying on its competitive advantages in the AI hardware and electric vehicle industries, the overall foreign trade is still expected to maintain a certain degree of resilience.

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