Today’s global trade environment shows significant developments in import outreach, financial-market linkages and public sentiment about trade deficits. On November 4, 2025, several new policy moves and survey results emerged that exporters, importers and trade advisors should keep front of mind.

At EximHub, we follow these trends closely to provide export-strategy guidance, compliance insights and market-access support. Below are the major trade-news items for the day.


1. China Launches “Big Market for All: Export for China” Import Initiative

Source: Reuters — “China plans events to boost imports, promises ‘win-win cooperation’” (Nov 4, 2025) Reuters
The People’s Republic of China announced a new initiative called “Big Market for All: Export for China”, which will include 10 major annual events each featuring 5-6 countries, with the aim of boosting its imports and positioning China as an export destination for global suppliers. The program was announced ahead of the China International Import Expo (CIIE) held Nov 5-10 in Shanghai. The Chinese Commerce Minister emphasised “open up win-win cooperation”.
Why it matters:


2. China Expands RMB-Traded Stock Access via Hong Kong Link

Source: Reuters — “China to support renminbi stocks trading counter …” (Nov 4, 2025) Reuters
China signalled that its authorities will support the establishment of a renminbi (RMB) counter under the Mainland-Hong Kong Stock Connect scheme, allowing mainland investors to trade Hong Kong-listed stocks in RMB — strengthening financial linkages and offshore-RMB liquidity.
Trade relevance:


3. U.S. Public Oversight: Nearly Half View the Large U.S. Trade Deficit as an Economic Emergency

Source: Reuters — “Poll shows 47% of Americans see large US trade deficit as economic emergency” (Nov 4, 2025) Reuters
A newly-released poll found that 47% of Americans consider the United States’ large goods-trade deficit to be an “economic emergency”. This sentiment was shared across party-lines (47% Democrats, 57% Republicans). The poll was commissioned ahead of the Supreme Court of the United States hearing on the legality of sweeping tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).
Trade implications:

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