2025-10-13 • China’s exports rose 8.3% and imports 7.4%, despite U.S.

Morning Intelligence – The Gist

China’s September trade data defied gravity: exports jumped 8.3 % and imports 7.4 %, even as President Trump threatens 100 % tariffs and Beijing tightens rare-earth controls. The U.S. share of Chinese exports has slid below 10 %, yet overall shipments hit a six-month high of $328.5 bn.(reuters.com)

Those figures mask a profound realignment. Factories are rerouting goods to Southeast Asia, Latin America and Africa—regions where Chinese sales grew 15–56 %. The pattern echoes America’s 1980s clash with Japan: tariffs slowed direct trade, but value chains simply hopped borders. History suggests punitive duties raise costs without halting technological rivalry; copper, lithium and now advanced chips become the pressure points.(reuters.com)

Washington and Beijing are locked in a feedback loop of restriction and retaliation at the very moment the world needs coordinated investment in green industry. As economist Mariana Mazzucato warns, “capitalism without direction is just wealth extraction.” If leaders substitute tariffs for strategy, the price will be paid in stalled climate action and splintered innovation.

— The Gist AI Editor

Morning Intelligence • Monday, October 13, 2025

the Gist View

China’s September trade data defied gravity: exports jumped 8.3 % and imports 7.4 %, even as President Trump threatens 100 % tariffs and Beijing tightens rare-earth controls. The U.S. share of Chinese exports has slid below 10 %, yet overall shipments hit a six-month high of $328.5 bn.(reuters.com)

Those figures mask a profound realignment. Factories are rerouting goods to Southeast Asia, Latin America and Africa—regions where Chinese sales grew 15–56 %. The pattern echoes America’s 1980s clash with Japan: tariffs slowed direct trade, but value chains simply hopped borders. History suggests punitive duties raise costs without halting technological rivalry; copper, lithium and now advanced chips become the pressure points.(reuters.com)

Washington and Beijing are locked in a feedback loop of restriction and retaliation at the very moment the world needs coordinated investment in green industry. As economist Mariana Mazzucato warns, “capitalism without direction is just wealth extraction.” If leaders substitute tariffs for strategy, the price will be paid in stalled climate action and splintered innovation.

— The Gist AI Editor

The Global Overview

Trade Tensions Shake Markets

Renewed US-China trade hostilities are rattling global markets, with Asian equities sliding and gold rising on safe-haven demand (FT). The sell-off follows President Trump’s threat to impose 100% tariffs on Chinese goods by November 1, responding to Beijing’s new export controls on rare earth minerals. The escalation prompted warnings of a potential “breakdown in international order,” threatening already fragile supply chains that depend on cross-border stability (FT). My take: such tariff wars are a tax on consumers and a blunt instrument that disrupts capital flows, ultimately undermining the free-market principles that foster global prosperity.

EU-China Climate Rift Widens

Separately, geopolitical friction is mounting between Brussels and Beijing ahead of the crucial COP30 climate summit (Politico.eu). EU Climate Envoy Wopke Hoekstra’s pointed criticism of China’s emissions targets has sparked fears of diplomatic discord that could derail cooperation on global climate goals. While framed as a climate issue, this clash reflects deeper strategic competition over green technology and regulation. An EU-China standoff risks politicizing climate policy, creating uncertainty for industries investing in the energy transition and potentially fracturing international efforts.

Corporate Debt Under Scrutiny

Away from geopolitics, the collapse of auto-parts conglomerate First Brands reveals significant underlying risk in corporate finance (WSJ). The firm amassed a hidden $2 billion debt pile while acquiring smaller factories, highlighting how lax oversight and complex corporate structures can obscure financial instability. This episode serves as a cautionary tale about the dangers of excessive leverage and the importance of transparent accounting, particularly as rising interest rates pressure indebted companies across key industrial sectors.

Stay tuned for the next Gist—your edge in a shifting world.

The European Perspective

Cracks in the Coalition

A significant fissure in European resolve appeared today as Hungary and Slovakia confirmed they will halt military aid to Ukraine (ZDF, The Guardian, European Interest). This policy pivot threatens to unravel the EU’s united front against Russian aggression. The move places a heavier financial and logistical burden on stalwarts like Germany and France, potentially forcing a strategic recalculation of a long-term economic support package. This fracturing of a key Western alliance sends a powerful signal to markets about the political risks now embedded in European security, a development that will be closely watched in Moscow. The potential addition of the Czech Republic to this dissenting bloc further complicates EU foreign policy, which requires unanimity for key decisions.

A Plea for Stability

The timing is stark. As political fragmentation risks destabilizing the continent, Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey makes a forceful case for deeper multilateralism to ensure financial stability (Politico, Bank of England). Writing as Chair of the Financial Stability Board—an international body monitoring the global financial system—Bailey argues that without “timely and consistent implementation of agreed reforms” across borders, the system remains vulnerable to shocks. His plea from the G20 finance meetings in Washington underscores a growing tension: while geopolitics are pulling nations apart, our economic architecture demands they pull closer together to preempt systemic shocks. There is no trade-off between financial stability and objectives like growth.

Catch the next Gist for the continent’s moving pieces.


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