China's Exports Surprise and Boost Asia's Markets

By: rootdata|2026/07/14 09:33:27

China's exports recorded a 27% year-on-year jump in June, far exceeding market projections. Imports also surprised positively. The numbers reignited optimism about the world's second-largest economy and acted as fuel for a session of widespread gains in Asian stock markets.

This data is significant for two reasons. First, it signals that external demand for Chinese products remains robust, even amid a backdrop of trade tariffs and a reorganization of global supply chains. Second, it indicates that China's GDP growth in the second quarter may have been more resilient than consensus forecasts suggested.

For Brazilian investors, the performance of the Chinese economy is no minor detail. China is Brazil's main trading partner, and the health of its trade balance directly influences the prices of commodities such as iron ore and soybeans, which impact the Ibovespa and the exchange rate.

Recovery in Technology and Semiconductors Leads Gains

The Nikkei index in Tokyo rose by 0.74%, closing at 67,743 points. The highlight was SoftBank Group, which advanced 3.3% after the company's president, Masayoshi Son, publicly rejected the thesis that there is a bubble in AI infrastructure investments. The statement came during a corporate event in the Japanese capital.

Son's remarks are not trivial. SoftBank is one of the largest global investors in AI, and its outlook on the sector serves as a barometer for the market. The confidence demonstrated reinforces the narrative that investments in AI computing capacity continue to be justified by the growing demand from businesses and governments.

In South Korea, the Kospi rose 0.73%, reaching 6,856 points. However, this movement only recovered a fraction of the nearly 9% drop recorded in the previous session. Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, two global semiconductor giants that represent more than half of the index's capitalization, rose 3.34% and 3.69%, respectively. The semiconductor chain remains one of the sectors most sensitive to fluctuations in expectations surrounding AI.

Mainland China Leads, Hong Kong Lags Behind

Mainland China's markets had the best performance of the day. The Shanghai Composite rose 1.36% to 3,967 points, while the Shenzhen Composite advanced 2.26% to 2,626 points. The direct reaction to the export data was more intense in these markets, which makes sense given the weight of the trade balance in the local economic dynamics.

According to ING's analysis, the June figures likely sustained the growth pace of the Chinese economy in the second quarter. The Dutch bank's reading reinforces the expectation that China's GDP may have exceeded projections for the period, which would be positive for emerging markets like Brazil.

Hong Kong was more subdued. The Hang Seng rose only 0.52%, closing at 24,340 points. In Taiwan, the Taiex moved in the opposite direction, falling 1.42% to 44,737 points, reflecting persistent caution regarding the chip sector in an increasingly complex regulatory environment.

Oil and Geopolitics: The Risk the Market Ignored

Risk appetite prevailed despite a turbulent geopolitical landscape. Brent crude rose 4% during the Asian session, accumulating a gain of more than 13% over two trading sessions following renewed exchanges of attacks between the United States and Iran.

The rise in oil prices is a factor of concern for the coming days. A sustained Brent above certain levels could pressure inflation expectations in the United States, complicating the outlook for interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. This would have a cascading effect on emerging markets, capital flows, and consequently on risk assets, including stocks and cryptocurrencies.

In Oceania, the Australian stock market ended the day nearly stable, with the S&ASX 200 at 8,808 points. Australia, like Brazil, is an economy strongly linked to China through commodity exports and tends to react with a lag to positive Chinese data.

What This Means for Investors in Brazil

Strong data from China typically benefits the real, mining and steel stocks in the Ibovespa, and the overall tone of the local market. The positive surprise in Chinese exports for June may provide short-term momentum to commodity-linked stocks on the B3.

On the other hand, the rise in oil prices adds a layer of uncertainty. Oil and gas companies may benefit, but the inflationary impact of a more expensive barrel tends to moderate expectations for global monetary easing, limiting the scope for a more consistent rise in risk assets.

The balance between these two vectors, robust Chinese data and geopolitical tension in the Middle East, is likely to set the tone for markets in the coming sessions. For investors, the scenario calls for attention to developments in the Middle East and China's GDP data, which is expected to be released in the coming days.

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