Chinese Exports Grow 3% Year-Over-Year in March, Slowest Since October 2025
Chinese exports increased by 3% year-over-year in March, marking the smallest rise since October 2025 and a slowdown from February's 40% growth. Imports rose 28% year-over-year, the highest since late 2021, led by a 50% increase in integrated circuit purchases. The data reflects recent trade trends as of April 2026.
Substrate placeholder — needs reviewChinese exports rose 3% year-over-year in March, according to data reported by @KobeissiLetter. This represents the smallest increase since October 2025. The figure follows a 40% year-over-year growth in February.
The growth was driven by a 50% jump in purchases of integrated circuits. This import surge occurs amid ongoing global demand for technology components.
Imports, in contrast, show acceleration in inbound goods, particularly in electronics-related sectors. These figures are based on official trade statistics for the period.
Transparency
Story details
Related Stories
New York PostSpaceX Launches IPO Roadshow at JPMorgan, Targeting $135/Share Price
Elon Musk joined Jamie Dimon in a virtual interview to open the IPO roadshow. The company plans to sell 556 million shares at $135 each.
thesouthafrican.comHunter Biden Calls Fiat Currency a Sham, Endorses Blockchain as Future
Hunter Biden posted on X that fiat money is a sham and the banking class is corrupt. He added that decentralized digital currency and blockchain technology represent the inevitable future.
Trump Administration Moves Defaulted Student Loans to Treasury for Collection via Existing Federal Program
The move routes defaulted borrowers through the Treasury's Cross-Servicing program, which relies on private contractors. More than 10 million borrowers are in default or delinquency.