The post Export stayed resilient in September on strong demand from nonUS markets – UOB Group appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Both China’s export and import growth were well-above Bloomberg’s consensus forecasts in September. China’s exports rose at the fastest pace in six months at 8.3% y/y in September (Bloomberg est: 6.6%, August: 4.4%) and imports jumped sharply by 7.4% y/y (Bloomberg est: 1.8%, August: 1.3%). In CNY-terms, exports were up 8.4% y/y (August: 4.8%) while imports were similarly higher at 7.5% y/y (August: 1.7%). Due to the larger improvements in imports, China’s trade surplus narrowed to US$90.45 bn from US$102.33 bn in August, UOB Group’s FX analysts Quek Ser Leang and Peter Chia note. China’s rare earth export moderates at a sharper pace in September “Exports remained buoyed by non-US markets while US continued to be the worst performing major market for China as supply chains diversification accelerates. Export to the US contracted for the 6th consecutive month since Apr, though the decline narrowed to -27.0% y/y in September from -33.1% y/y in August. In September, export growth was led by markets such as South Africa (+23.3%), India (+14.4%), EU (+14.2%), and ASEAN (+15.6%) in particular Vietnam (+24.5%), Thailand (+19.7%) and Indonesia (+17.1%).” “By key products, the strongest export growth was seen in ships, semiconductors, LCD panels, Chinese medicine and motor vehicles which expanded at a doubledigit pace in September. On the other hand, contractions were the worst for consumer goods such as toys, footwear, handbags and garments as well as commodities such as refined petroleum products and steel/iron products, indicating a slowdown in global consumer demand.” “China’s rare earth export which is at the center of its tensions with the US, moderated at a sharper pace in September. In volume terms, rare earth shipments fell 30.9% compared to August, to 4,000 tons in September.” Source: https://www.fxstreet.com/news/china-export-stayed-resilient-in-september-on-strong-demand-from-nonus-markets-uob-group-202510130943The post Export stayed resilient in September on strong demand from nonUS markets – UOB Group appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Both China’s export and import growth were well-above Bloomberg’s consensus forecasts in September. China’s exports rose at the fastest pace in six months at 8.3% y/y in September (Bloomberg est: 6.6%, August: 4.4%) and imports jumped sharply by 7.4% y/y (Bloomberg est: 1.8%, August: 1.3%). In CNY-terms, exports were up 8.4% y/y (August: 4.8%) while imports were similarly higher at 7.5% y/y (August: 1.7%). Due to the larger improvements in imports, China’s trade surplus narrowed to US$90.45 bn from US$102.33 bn in August, UOB Group’s FX analysts Quek Ser Leang and Peter Chia note. China’s rare earth export moderates at a sharper pace in September “Exports remained buoyed by non-US markets while US continued to be the worst performing major market for China as supply chains diversification accelerates. Export to the US contracted for the 6th consecutive month since Apr, though the decline narrowed to -27.0% y/y in September from -33.1% y/y in August. In September, export growth was led by markets such as South Africa (+23.3%), India (+14.4%), EU (+14.2%), and ASEAN (+15.6%) in particular Vietnam (+24.5%), Thailand (+19.7%) and Indonesia (+17.1%).” “By key products, the strongest export growth was seen in ships, semiconductors, LCD panels, Chinese medicine and motor vehicles which expanded at a doubledigit pace in September. On the other hand, contractions were the worst for consumer goods such as toys, footwear, handbags and garments as well as commodities such as refined petroleum products and steel/iron products, indicating a slowdown in global consumer demand.” “China’s rare earth export which is at the center of its tensions with the US, moderated at a sharper pace in September. In volume terms, rare earth shipments fell 30.9% compared to August, to 4,000 tons in September.” Source: https://www.fxstreet.com/news/china-export-stayed-resilient-in-september-on-strong-demand-from-nonus-markets-uob-group-202510130943

Export stayed resilient in September on strong demand from nonUS markets – UOB Group

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

Both China’s export and import growth were well-above Bloomberg’s consensus forecasts in September. China’s exports rose at the fastest pace in six months at 8.3% y/y in September (Bloomberg est: 6.6%, August: 4.4%) and imports jumped sharply by 7.4% y/y (Bloomberg est: 1.8%, August: 1.3%). In CNY-terms, exports were up 8.4% y/y (August: 4.8%) while imports were similarly higher at 7.5% y/y (August: 1.7%). Due to the larger improvements in imports, China’s trade surplus narrowed to US$90.45 bn from US$102.33 bn in August, UOB Group’s FX analysts Quek Ser Leang and Peter Chia note.

China’s rare earth export moderates at a sharper pace in September

“Exports remained buoyed by non-US markets while US continued to be the worst performing major market for China as supply chains diversification accelerates. Export to the US contracted for the 6th consecutive month since Apr, though the decline narrowed to -27.0% y/y in September from -33.1% y/y in August. In September, export growth was led by markets such as South Africa (+23.3%), India (+14.4%), EU (+14.2%), and ASEAN (+15.6%) in particular Vietnam (+24.5%), Thailand (+19.7%) and Indonesia (+17.1%).”

“By key products, the strongest export growth was seen in ships, semiconductors, LCD panels, Chinese medicine and motor vehicles which expanded at a doubledigit pace in September. On the other hand, contractions were the worst for consumer goods such as toys, footwear, handbags and garments as well as commodities such as refined petroleum products and steel/iron products, indicating a slowdown in global consumer demand.”

“China’s rare earth export which is at the center of its tensions with the US, moderated at a sharper pace in September. In volume terms, rare earth shipments fell 30.9% compared to August, to 4,000 tons in September.”

Source: https://www.fxstreet.com/news/china-export-stayed-resilient-in-september-on-strong-demand-from-nonus-markets-uob-group-202510130943

Market Opportunity
Oasis Logo
Oasis Price(ROSE)
$0.010814
$0.010814$0.010814
-1.01%
USD
Oasis (ROSE) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Covéa Chooses Shift Technology as Strategic Partner for Fraud and Risk Management

Covéa Chooses Shift Technology as Strategic Partner for Fraud and Risk Management

Covéa has selected Shift Technology as a long-term partner to support a consistent and shared view of risk from policy inception through to claims settlement The
Share
ffnews2026/04/02 07:00
On-chain ransom negotiations show ShibaSwap hacker won’t be low-balled

On-chain ransom negotiations show ShibaSwap hacker won’t be low-balled

The post On-chain ransom negotiations show ShibaSwap hacker won’t be low-balled appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. On-chain messages between hacker and victim reveal a ransom standoff, with every demand etched permanently on the blockchain. Last Friday, $2.8 million worth of (mostly dog-themed) crypto tokens were stolen from ShibaSwap, a “next generation decentralized exchange” for the Shiba Inu ecosystem. Among the loot were approximately 250 billion KNINE tokens, from liquid staking protocol K9 Finance. K9 wants them back, and is willing to pay the hacker a bounty. The tokens are ostensibly worth over $600,000 at current market prices. Though a simulated swap, through extremely thin liquidity, paints a rather different picture. The hack was flagged by security firms Peckshield and Tikkala Security and involved using a “flash” loan to buy up enough tokens to achieve “majority validator power.” Then, the hacker signed “a malicious state to drain assets from the bridge.” They subsequently split up most of the stolen assets between various addresses but the stash of KNINE tokens, though, clearly not worth swapping, remains in their primary address. Read more: Circle and Tether bug bounties aren’t enough says LlamaRisk ShibaSwap hack negotiations begin On Monday, an address labelled “k9dev.eth” reached out to their “Dear Shibarium Bridge Hacker” on-chain, offering a five-ether (ETH) “bounty to return stolen KNINE tokens.” Presumably, the K9 team is very keen to avoid the hacker swapping such a large quantity of KNINE which would likely send its price to near zero. The message also contains the address of a bounty contract to facilitate the exchange, piling on the pressure with the warning that the “bounty will start to decrease in seven days.” Not one to be low-balled, however, the hacker has responded, “I can’t accept five ETH.” They instead propose no less than 50 ETH (around $225,000), adding “let me know when you are willing to meet that price.” The full exchange…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 03:25
Cardano Price Review: Can ADA Reach $1 by 2028?

Cardano Price Review: Can ADA Reach $1 by 2028?

As the second quarter begins, established networks are launching massive upgrades, yet their market value remains under heavy pressure. This disconnect is forcing
Share
Techbullion2026/04/02 19:51

USD1 Genesis: 0 Fees + 12% APR

USD1 Genesis: 0 Fees + 12% APRUSD1 Genesis: 0 Fees + 12% APR

New users: stake for up to 600% APR. Limited time!