Exports +19.4% y/y exp. +15.0%, prior +14.1%Imports +27.4% y/y, a solid result pointing to a pickup in domestic demand and stockpiling activity.exp. +25.0%, prior +25.3%Trade balance +$105.43B, the strongest surplus reading in recent months.exp. +$92.1B, prior +$84.82BThe export beat is likely to draw attention from trade-sensitive markets and trading partners already watching China's external position closely. The acceleration from April's 14.1% pace suggests Chinese manufacturers are finding ways to sustain overseas shipments despite the broader global uncertainty created by the US-Iran conflict and elevated freight and energy costs. Front-loading ahead of unexpected tariff changes or logistical constraints may be contributing to the strength, a pattern seen in previous episodes of global trade uncertainty.The import surge is a more nuanced signal. A 27.4% annual rise, beating both consensus and the prior month, points to either genuine domestic demand recovery or aggressive raw material and component stockpiling, or some combination of both. Either interpretation carries implications for commodity markets, particularly energy and industrial inputs, where China's buying patterns exert outsized influence on global pricing.The trade balance figure of $105.43 billion is the most headline-grabbing data point, running more than $13 billion above consensus and over $20 billion ahead of April's reading. For currency markets, a surplus of that magnitude reinforces the structural current account support for the yuan even as domestic confidence remains fragile. For global trade watchers, the data adds a fresh variable to an already complex picture of shifting supply chains and geopolitical realignment.China's surplus with the US for May was US$26bn, and for the January - May period a whopping US$113.7bn. These numbers are not going to ease US-China trade tension. This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.