China imports, exports slow sharply in November
Brent Lewin | Bloomberg | Getty Images · CNBC

China's annual import and export figures slowed sharply in November, data showed on Monday, reinforcing signs of fragility in the world's second-largest economy.

Exports rose 4.7 percent in November from a year earlier, much slower than an 11.6 percent rise in October and below expectations for an 8.2 percent increase in a Reuters poll.

Imports fell an annual 6.7 percent in November, well below October's 4.6 percent rise, and below expectations for a 3.9 percent increase. That left the country with a trade surplus of $54.5 billion for the month, above expectations of $43.5 billion.

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The Australian dollar weakened against the U.S. dollar after the data was released, recently trading at $0.8297.

"It's clear domestic demand is pretty weak, most of the decline seems to be commodity related - which partly reflects lower prices, but is also because of the slowdown in the housing sector and overcapacity in industrial sectors," Alaistair Chan, economist at Moody's Analytics told CNBC.

"Exports are still positive, which is a good thing. It appears that the previous month's strength was unsustainable as a lot of it seemed to be driven by electronics, which was a one-off bounce. This is a return to a more realistic trend," he added.

The remaining pieces

Investors will get a deeper insight into the health of the economy over the course of the week, with inflation, industrial output, retail sales and fixed asset investment data for November due in the coming days.

In addition, top policymakers are expected to convene in Beijing this week for the country's annual Central Economic Work Conference (CEWC) - a closed-door meeting that sets economic priorities for the coming year, including the gross domestic product (GDP) target.

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While the targets are typically made public in March during the National People's Congress, they are occasionally leaked to local media shortly after the meeting.

As growth appears set to fall towards the lower-end of this year's "about" 7.5 percent target, Beijing is widely expected to propose a target of 7.0 percent - the lowest in a decade.