Sikat na Artikulo

Commerzbank’s Dr. Henry Hao notes that China’s Q2 2026 GDP growth slowed to 4.3% year-on-year, below Beijing’s 4.5%-5% target and consensus expectations. Fixed-asset investment contracted sharply, while June industrial output and retail sales surprised on the upside. With H1 GDP at 4.7%, policymakers face mounting pressure to accelerate support in H2 to avoid missing the annual growth target.
Growth below target shifts focus
"China's Q2 2026 GDP expanded 4.3% year-on-year, falling below the official 4.5%-5% target range and missing the consensus forecast of 4.5%. Fixed-asset investment contracted 5.7% in H1, deepening from prior months. June industrial output and retail sales both beat expectations, offering partial relief. Policymakers now face intensifying pressure to accelerate support in H2."
"China's Q2 GDP growth decelerated to 4.3% yoy, the weakest reading in more than three years and a sharp step down from the 5.0% expansion recorded in Q1. The result undershot the Bloomberg consensus of 4.5% and fell below the lower bound of Beijing's official full-year target range of 4.5% to 5%. On a sequential basis, the economy expanded 0.9% qoq, in line with our expectations, suggesting the pace of activity has not collapsed outright."
"With H1 GDP at 4.7% year-to-date, the second half will need to deliver an acceleration for Beijing to avoid a miss on the annual growth target. A notable development within the release is that the GDP deflator turned positive for the first time in three years, rising 1.6% in Q2, as higher oil prices ended a prolonged streak of economy-wide deflation."
"The June data reinforces a K-shaped growth dynamic that has defined China's economy through 2026. Export-oriented and technology-linked manufacturing continues to outperform, while domestic consumption and investment remain weak."
"With GDP now below the official target floor, the pressure on policymakers to act has intensified. The PBoC recently pledged to keep monetary policy moderately loose, enhance counter-cyclical adjustments, and strengthen support for domestic demand and technological innovation."
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor. Know more.)












