China Jan-Feb crude oil and copper imports fall

07 March, 2023
China Jan-Feb crude oil and copper imports fall
China's imports of iron ore and soybeans rose in the January- February period from a year earlier, while those of crude oil and copper fell, customs data showed on Tuesday.

China's exports in the January-February period again fell from a year earlier, customs data showed, while imports also decreased again and at a faster rate, reflecting a slowdown in the global economy and weak domestic demand. Exports in the two months were 6.8 percent lower than a year before, beating a Reuters poll that expected exports to decrease by 9.4 percent. Imports were down by 10.2 percent, missing the poll estimate by a large margin, which had predicted a 5.5 percent drop.

KEY POINTS:
* Crude oil: Jan-Feb imports at 84.06 mt, down 1.3 per cent y/y

* Iron ore: Jan-Feb imports at 194 mt, up 7.3 per cent y/y

* Soybeans: Jan-Feb imports at 16.17 mt, up 16.1 per cent y/y

* Copper: Jan-Feb imports at 879,000 tonnes, down 9.3 per cent y/y

Preliminary table of commodity trade data

Below are comments from analysts on the commodities data.

Comment on soybeans

ROSA WANG, ANALYST AT SHANGHAI JC INTELLIGENCE CO LTD:

"The imports in January were likely normal but those in February may be higher than expected because of more shipments from the U.S."

Comment on iron ore

PEI HAO, SHANGHAI-BASED SENIOR ANALYST FROM FIS, AN INTERNATIONAL BROKERAGE FIRM:

"The year-on-year rise is in line with our expectation. Some miners shipped more volumes (of iron ore cargoes) in middle to late December 2022 to catch up with their annual targets. And, this seemed to have been well reflected in the import number for January-February."

"The March import volumes may be lower than the average of January-February, but a year-on-year increase is also expected."

Comment on copper

LYNN ZHAO, SHANGHAI-BASED COMMODITY STRATEGIST AT MACQUARIE:

"We had expected copper imports to decline year-on-year in January-February with closed arbitrage. We are seeing copper demand picking up into March across most of the end-user sectors though largely seasonally."

LINKS:

For details, see the official Customs website

(www.customs.gov.cn)

BACKGROUND:
China is the world's biggest crude oil importer and top buyer of coal, iron ore and soybeans.
Source: www.channelnewsasia.com
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