BEIJING — China’s exports plummeted in September, according to data released Thursday, as anemic global demand dealt another blow to the world’s second-largest economy and weak imports fueled worries about crucial domestic appetite.
The figures will come as a disappointment after a recent batch of healthy statistics, and suggest the Asian giant and key driver of the global economy has yet to see the bottom of a years-long growth slowdown.
China’s performance affects partners from Australia to Zambia, which have been battered as its expansion has slowed to levels not seen in a quarter of a century. Customs said exports sank 10.0% year-on-year in September to $184.5 billion, while imports fell 1.9% to $142.5 billion.
“There remain obvious obstacles facing China’s foreign trade development,” Customs spokesman Huang Songping told reporters in Beijing. “World growth remains sluggish and global trade lacks effective support.”
Both readings missed expectations, with a Bloomberg News survey of economists forecasting a drop of 3.3% for exports and a 0.6% rise in imports. The figures are likely to put further pressure on China’s yuan currency, which hit six-year lows against the U.S. dollar this week.
The trade surplus declined to $42.0 billion, down around $10 billion month-on-month, which analysts from ANZ said could weigh on the yuan exchange rate, “particularly in the face of a stronger” dollar. 
“Against the backdrop of an ongoing capital account deficit, the trade surplus has been an important factor in offsetting capital outflows. But the contraction in exports may continue to see the trade surplus narrow,” they said. 
Analyst Julian Evans-Pritchard of Capital Economists said the results were “much weaker” than expected, noting that persistently “sluggish global demand” dragged on exports, and that the decline in imports raised questions about the strength of recovery in China’s domestic demand.
In August China’s imports beat expectations and broke a two-year losing streak, posting a 1.5% annual increase. But last month’s return to negative territory, with drops in import volumes of iron ore and copper, could be “an early sign that the recent recovery in economic activity is losing momentum”, Evans-Pritchard said. However, he warned against “reading too much into a single data point.”
The weak data underscored that any recovery in global demand was going to be “gradual and susceptible to setbacks,” said Louis Kuijs of Oxford Economics.
Looking ahead, the world’s largest trader in goods faces headwinds due to “downside risks stemming from the U.S. election” and Britain’s EU exit, the ANZ analysts said. Exports, long a key driver of Chinese growth, were not expected to contribute to its expansion, they added.
Customs spokesman Huang told the briefing that China’s challenges were “not short term” and its traditional trade competitiveness was “weakening.” Domestic economic structural reform was still painful and “there remain rather large downward pressures on the economy,” he said.
China is seeking to restructure its economy to make the spending power of its nearly 1.4 billion people a key driver for growth, instead of massive government investment and cheap exports. But medium to high-end manufacturing was leaving China and returning to developed economies as they sought to boost their own industries to create jobs, Huang noted.
“Global trade protectionism is rising and China’s trade is facing risks from increasing trade frictions,” he added.
A total of 85 trade remedy investigations were launched against China in the first eight months of the year, up 49% year on year, he said. But traders brushed off the figures, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index closing fractionally higher on Thursday, up 0.09%.
There are some positive factors that may support external demand in the coming months, CICC analysts said, pointing to a rebound in an export orders index for China’s manufacturers, and improved U.S. economic indicators, though they noted a Fed rate hike could “bring uncertainties” to markets.