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China trade figures improve slightly in September

Exports, which have historically served as a key growth engine for China, dropped 6.2% year-on-year in September
Exports, which have historically served as a key growth engine for China, dropped 6.2% year-on-year in September

Chinese exports fell in September, data showed today, but at a slower pace than expected for the second month in a row,.

This provides hope that the world's number two economy is seeing some stability after stuttering throughout the year.

The government has recently enacted measures to boost activity in a sluggish economy grappling with a major property crisis and weaker consumption since Beijing abolished its strict zero-Covid policy last year.

Exports - which have historically served as a key growth engine for China - dropped 6.2% year-on-year last month, a slower pace than that forecast by economists in a Bloomberg survey.

That was an improvement on the 8.8% drop in August, which was also better than expected.

Imports, meanwhile, also fell 6.2%, compared with 7.3% in August and the 6.3% forecast.

The figures come ahead of the release of third-quarter economic growth data due next week.

But underscoring the current fragility, inflation was flat in September, separate figures showed today.

The main gauge, the consumer price index (CPI), came in at 0% for last month, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reported.

China slipped into deflation in July for the first time since 2021 but it bounced back modestly in August. However, analysts warned a relapse in the coming months was still possible.