Abstract:Despite looming tariff threats and Western protectionism, China’s export engine is defying expectations, posting record highs in trade surplus figures through November. A deep dive into the trade data reveals a massive structural pivot: China is successfully substituting stalling Western demand with aggressive growth in Emerging Markets.

Despite looming tariff threats and Western protectionism, Chinas export engine is defying expectations, posting record highs in trade surplus figures through November. A deep dive into the trade data reveals a massive structural pivot: China is successfully substituting stalling Western demand with aggressive growth in Emerging Markets.
Data shows that while exports to the Eurozone and Japan face pressure, Chinese shipments to ASEAN, Latin America, and Africa are surging.
This shift has significant implications for commodity currencies by proxy:
The composition of Chinese exports is also moving up the value chain. Gains in batteries, semiconductors, and electric vehicles are offsetting declines in textiles and low-end manufacturing. This “tech-heavy” export mix suggests that trade frictions in 2026 will likely center on high-tech industrial policy rather than low-cost consumer goods.

Barriers in Asian currency markets are shifting as Japan embraces monetary normalization and China navigates a complex valuation recovery.

The exchange rate of onshore and offshore RMB against US dollar (CNY and CNH) both headed higher to over 6.90 in yesterday’s trading. As of press time, CNY and CNH record 6.8897 and 6.8851, respectively.