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EU-China trade imbalance moves closer to breaking point
China’s imports from the European Union dropped for the first time in three months, again swelling the trade imbalance that has set the two economic powers on a collision course, with the May customs data confirming the lopsided pattern that is driving Brussels toward the restrictive measures and confrontation documented throughout the analysis of the deteriorating EU-China relationship.
Chinese imports from the bloc slumped 1.3 percent after two months of gains, while exports to the EU, though growing at their weakest pace since last October at 7.6 percent, kept China’s monthly trade surplus with the bloc above thirty billion dollars and slightly wider than April.
June 10, 2026 -
China’s commodity flows show a crisis arbitrage machine
China’s May trade data presents a comprehensive portrait of how the world’s largest commodity trader has reconfigured its flows in response to the Gulf conflict, simultaneously filling global shortages where its production capacity allows profit and retreating from import markets where prices have surged, with the customs figures confirming the patterns documented across the analysis of individual commodity markets throughout the crisis.
The aluminum export surge stands as the clearest example of China capitalizing on the conflict’s disruptions. Outbound cargoes climbed sixteen percent from a year earlier to 630,000 tons, as smelters in the world’s largest producing nation maximized output to capture international sales after the war halted supplies from the Middle East’s key producing region and rallied prices.
June 10, 2026 -
China’s oil stockpile strategy is emerging as the market’s key stabilizer
China has begun tapping its commercial crude reserves to help offset the supply shock from the Gulf conflict, drawing down inventories at a pace expected to average about one million barrels per day in the coming months, even as the world’s largest oil importer continues to prioritize reduced refinery throughput and fuel export restrictions as its primary tools for managing the disruption.
The inventory draws, confirmed by satellite tracking that documented nearly twenty-five million barrels withdrawn in the month to June 7, mark a new phase in China’s crisis management, the transition from accumulation to consumption of the strategic buffer that years of countercyclical stockpiling created.
June 10, 2026 -
China’s energy transition is moving faster than its targets
China’s energy transition is riddled with apparent contradictions: cleaner cities and green industries driving thirty percent of GDP growth coexist with record coal consumption and the construction of new coal-fired power stations, while climate targets that seem unambitious mask a transformation that may be proceeding faster than the official goals suggest.
The pessimistic reading, that the greening of the world’s second-largest economy will always be stop-start, misreads the underlying dynamics. China possesses both the means and the motive to dramatically accelerate its decarbonization, and the structural forces driving its transition suggest that the coal buildout is a transitional hedge rather than a long-term commitment.
June 10, 2026 -
China’s deflation problem becomes a cost-push inflation squeeze
China’s producer prices rose for a third consecutive month in May to their highest level since July 2022, as the Gulf conflict’s energy price shock continues to push the world’s second-largest economy out of its years-long deflationary spiral and into a complex new inflationary environment that presents policymakers with a distinctive set of challenges.
The producer price index climbed 3.9 percent from a year earlier, exceeding both forecasts and April’s 2.8 percent rise, while consumer prices remained elevated at 1.2 percent, driven primarily by the gasoline costs that the conflict has inflated. The transformation of China’s price environment is one of the conflict’s more paradoxical effects.
June 10, 2026 -
Copper markets face tariffs, rate fears and war risk
Copper edged lower on Wednesday as the volatility of the Gulf conflict and mounting macroeconomic concerns overcame the price support that potential US tariffs have provided, illustrating the complex crosscurrents that are buffeting industrial metals markets as the crisis enters its fifth month.
Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange declined to around 13,572 dollars per metric ton, with the Shanghai contract following suit, as the broader metals complex retreated across the board. The session’s price action reflected the competing forces that have made copper such a difficult market to navigate.
June 10, 2026 -
China’s commodity flows reveal the power of price signals
China’s commodity trade data for May provides a textbook demonstration of how price movements drive the flows of the world’s largest natural resource buyer, with the country’s imports and exports across crude oil, copper, aluminum, and coal all responding to the price signals that the Gulf conflict has generated.
The pattern that emerges from the customs data confirms the analytical theme that has run throughout the crisis: China’s commodity behavior is governed by economic calculation rather than altruism or panic, with the country leveraging its vast inventories, flexible procurement, and production capacity to exploit the price dynamics that the conflict has created.
June 10, 2026 -
Germany’s renewable power surge offers industry a lifeline
Germany’s electricity output is on track to expand by the most in more than a decade in 2026, offering a potential lifeline to the industrial sector at the heart of Europe’s largest economy after years of near-stagnation, with the surge in domestically generated renewable power beginning to reverse the energy cost crisis that has hammered German manufacturing since the Ukraine war.
Total utility-supplied electricity output from January through May reached 209 terawatt hours, the strongest expansion in over a decade, coinciding with tentative signs of stabilization in parts of the manufacturing sector, including the energy-intensive chemical industry that has been among the hardest hit.
June 10, 2026
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