BNY’s Geoff Yu notes that China’s H1 data show resilient industrial and high‑tech production but weak domestic demand, with retail sales and property investment under pressure. The National Bureau of Statistics describes the economy as operating within an appropriate range, yet acknowledges an increasingly unstable external environment and insufficient domestic demand, reinforcing a case for stronger reflation efforts.
"China has stepped up its policy urgency: Q2 GDP slowed to 4.3%, with weak domestic demand and property drag offset mainly by exports and high-tech production. Beijing is not facing collapse, but its growth mix is too export-dependent and exposed to trade friction. The case for reflation is stronger."
"China assessment of its H1 economic performance remains broadly constructive. The National Bureau of Statistics stated that the economy “operated within an appropriate range” despite external pressures, highlighting faster production, stable employment, mild price increases, solid foreign trade and rapid development of new growth drivers."
"China’s H1 data showed a widening gap between resilient production and weak domestic demand. Industrial value added rose 5.4% y/y YTD, with manufacturing up 5.6% and high-tech manufacturing much stronger at +13.3%. June output accelerated to 5.3% y/y from 4.5% in May, while production of 3D printing devices, lithium-ion batteries and industrial robots rose 48.5%, 39.3% and 28.0% y/y, respectively."
"China’s investment and property data point to the main weakness in the economy. Fixed-asset investment excluding rural households fell 5.7% y/y in H1, with primary industry investment up 0.9%, but secondary and tertiary investment down 1.1% and 8.4%, respectively. Infrastructure, manufacturing and private investment all contracted, while real estate development investment fell 18.0%."
"Chinese labor and credit data were more stable, but not strong enough to offset the domestic demand picture. The surveyed urban unemployment rate averaged 5.2% in H1 and eased to 5.0% in June, while migrant worker numbers had risen 0.5% y/y by end-Q2. Total social financing grew by 7.4% y/y to ¥462.06tn, although H1 incremental financing was ¥2.02tn lower than a year earlier."
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