Depending on how you count it, the annual goods surplus is approaching USD 1 trillion, with monthly numbers repeatedly above USD 90–110 billion.
Exports up.
China strong again.
Trade engine running.
Then you step into factories.
Lines half empty.
Smaller POs.
Lower volumes.
Factories that are usually booked solid before Chinese New Year are asking for work.
So the real question isn’t what happened.
It’s this:
The surplus is real.
It came from a few clear places:
Exports moved.
Imports didn’t.
That’s how you get a surplus.
But here’s the first thing buyers need to understand:
The surplus is not spread evenly.
It’s driven by:
These companies are shipping volume.
They are not the factories most international buyers work with.
The private, mid-size, export-focused factories — the ones China Agent deals with — are in a different place.
Because demand, for most factories, is softer.
On the ground we see the same pattern:
Factories aren’t overloaded.
They’re underutilized.
That’s the paradox.
Tariffs don’t shut production overnight.
They slow confidence.
And hesitation shows up fast:
Factories feel this immediately.
So even while exports flow somewhere, most factories feel the slowdown where it matters — on their own lines.
This is where buyer risk actually increases.
When factories are busy, they cut corners to move volume.
When factories are hungry, they cut corners to survive.
That looks like:
Not because they want to cheat.
Because empty lines kill factories.
Buyers often think smaller orders are safer.
Often they’re not.
Smaller POs mean:
A factory that needs work will take your order.
That doesn’t mean it will protect it.
Here’s the clean version:
The surplus tells you about flow.
Factories tell you about stress.
Buyers should listen to factories.
This is not the moment to relax because “China is strong.”
It’s the moment to tighten control.
Hungry factories don’t push back.
They agree — and fix later.
That’s where surprises come from.
Good buyers adjust in three ways:
Fast yes doesn’t mean safe yes.
Idle capacity is not protection.
Clear specs.
Clear contracts.
On-ground presence.
Inspection before shipment.
No inspection.
No load.
China’s record trade surplus is real.
But it doesn’t describe the reality most buyers live in.
The factories you deal with aren’t booming.
They’re cautious.
They’re flexible.
They’re hungry.
That flexibility can work for you — or against you.
The difference is control.
China Agent works inside this gap —
between macro headlines and factory reality.
That’s where buyer risk actually lives.