
Record surplus beats expectations
China's trade statistics for June 2026 showed a monthly surplus of $125.62 billion, according to data cited by Seeking Alpha. Both export and import growth significantly exceeded analyst forecasts: exports jumped 27 percent compared with the same period last year, while imports surged by as much as 36 percent.
The backdrop is a so-called tariff rush — companies on both sides of the border are accelerating transactions to avoid upcoming trade barriers. This pattern has become a recurring phenomenon in 2025 and 2026 following the introduction of new tariff rates by the United States and a number of other countries.

What is driving the extraordinary numbers?
There is reason to be nuanced in interpreting these figures. Import growth of 36 percent may seem paradoxical for a country running a large trade surplus, but it is explained primarily by Chinese companies stockpiling raw materials and inputs ahead of anticipated tariff tightening. Export growth of 27 percent mirrors a corresponding mechanism: foreign buyers are bringing forward orders to lock in lower prices before new tariff rates take effect.
This means that the official trade figures may overstate the actual underlying level of trade activity — a point analysts consistently raise in connection with such tariff-related data distortions.

Capital controls and the rise of alternative payment channels
The large and growing trade surpluses are putting pressure on China's already strained capital-flow architecture. China maintains strict capital controls to prevent uncontrolled capital flight and preserve renminbi stability. The paradox is that these very controls, combined with massive trade surpluses, are fuelling demand for alternative payment solutions.
According to research based on well-known analyst statements, dollar-pegged stablecoins — particularly USDT — have become a widely used tool among Chinese exporters facing sanctions or banking restrictions. Estimated annual B2B payment flows via stablecoins to Chinese businesses are around $15 billion, and between 3 and 20 percent of supplier transactions are now said to be settled this way.
The gap between yuan internationalisation and capital controls
The dilemma facing Chinese authorities is well documented among economists: Beijing wants to internationalise the yuan and reduce dependence on the dollar system, yet the tight capital controls required for financial stability simultaneously make it attractive to bypass the Chinese payment system altogether.
Dominic Chiu of the Eurasia Group has noted that a yuan-based stablecoin would facilitate cross-border capital flows, but that Beijing fears such instruments would undermine capital controls. Hong Kong serves as a limited testing ground, where authorities currently expect to issue only a handful of licences in the first instance — with a strict focus on reserves and anti-money-laundering measures.
Market implications
For global markets, the June report is a double-edged signal. On one hand, it confirms that Chinese export capacity remains formidable. On the other, the artificially inflated figures suggest increased friction in the global trading system, as businesses adapt to a new reality of persistent tariff barriers.
For commodity markets — including oil, where China is the world's largest importer — import growth of 36 percent may provide temporary price support, but analysts warn that a normalisation following the tariff rush could produce an equally sharp drop in the demand picture in the second half of 2026.
Sources: Seeking Alpha (June 2026 trade data), Eurasia Group/Dominic Chiu (capital control analysis), Brookings Institution/Robin Brooks, NYU Law School/Winston Ma
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