China's exports dived more than a quarter on-year in February, new data showed today, while imports were almost 14 per cent off -- far worse than forecast.
"That shocking slide in exports was joined by at similarly weak, if not quite as alarming, drop in imports; combine the two together and it is the kind of ugly reminder of China's spluttering economy investors certainly do not need at the moment," said analyst Connor Campbell at trading firm Spreadex.
Hong Kong retreated 0.7 per cent and Tokyo dropped 0.8 per cent, but Shanghai reversed initial heavy falls to eke out slender gains.
The gloom spilled over into Europe, with Frankfurt and Paris shedding 1.2 per cent and 1.3 per cent respectively, while London lost 0.8 per cent.
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"Equity markets (are) in the red again, with disappointing overnight Chinese trade data showing plunging February exports serving to spook investors who are already concerned about the state of global growth," said head of research Mike van Dulken at Accendo Markets.
Mining stocks were the hardest hit sector on demand jitters because China is a leading consumer of most raw materials.
In London, resources giant Anglo American saw its share price tumble 9.3 per cent to 569.70 pence, topping the FTSE 100 fallers' board.
Swiss rival Glencore shed 7.64 per cent to 157.70 pence, Rio Tinto dropped 5.65 per cent to 2,110.50 pence and Antofagasta was down 5.06 per cent at 562.50 pence.
In Paris, the share price of steelmaking titan ArcelorMittal dived almost 5.0 percent to 4.43 euros, while Germany's ThyssenKrupp slid 1.8 percent to 16.88 euros in Frankfurt.
Europe's energy sector also took a knock from oil prices, which pulled back following healthy gains yesterday -- when Brent crude broke the USD 40-per-barrel barrier for the first time in 2016.
The gloomy Chinese figures are the latest to highlight weakness in the economy, although officials pointed out that they were skewed by the Chinese New Year holiday that saw factories shut down for a week.