China’s AI investment boom boosts exports, strengthens yuan for sixth straight quarter

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China’s AI investment boom boosts exports, strengthens yuan for sixth straight quarter

China’s bet on artificial intelligence is paying off in a way that shows up on the balance sheet. April 2026 exports surged src4.src% year-over-year, nearly doubling the 8.4% forecast economists had penciled in, with AI-related goods doing most of the heavy lifting.

The result: a stronger yuan, a swelling trade surplus, and a country that looks increasingly like the factory floor for the global AI buildout.

The numbers behind the boom
AI-related exports accounted for roughly half of April’s growth. Integrated circuit exports alone jumped 72.6% in early 2026.

The core AI industry in China surpassed src.2 trillion yuan, roughly $src74 billion, in output value by the end of 2025.

In January 2025, Beijing launched a National AI Industry Investment Fund worth 60 billion yuan, approximately $8.2 billion, designed to accelerate development across the AI supply chain.

What this means for the yuan
China’s trade surplus crossed the $src trillion mark. The currency appreciated roughly 4.5% during 2025 and reached multi-year highs at around 6.8 per USD in early 2026, marking six consecutive quarters of strengthening.

For context, the yuan spent much of 2023 and early 2024 under pressure, trading above 7.2 per dollar as capital outflows and a struggling property sector weighed on sentiment.

The People’s Bank of China has occasionally guided the yuan’s daily midpoint stronger.

The global supply chain reshuffle
The 72.6% spike in integrated circuit exports suggests that China’s strategy of building around US semiconductor restrictions is working, at least for chips below the restricted performance thresholds. Chinese foundries and design houses have focused on producing the types of semiconductors that power the vast middle tier of AI applications: inference chips, edge computing hardware, and the supporting electronics that every AI deployment requires.

Countries across Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and parts of Europe have become willing buyers, seeking AI capabilities without the geopolitical strings attached to US exports.

What investors should be watching
For equity investors, the concentration of export growth in AI-related goods points to specific opportunities in China’s semiconductor supply chain, from chip designers to packaging and testing firms.

The risk that keeps showing up in analyst notes is policy discontinuity. Any expansion of US export controls, or retaliatory tariffs from major trading partners concerned about trade imbalances, could squeeze margins quickly. The $src trillion trade surplus is the kind of number that attracts political attention in Washington, Brussels, and Tokyo.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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