
China's second-quarter GDP growth slows to 5.2% as economists warn of mounting headwinds
China's gross domestic product expanded by 5.2% in the second quarter, according to China's National Bureau of Statistics on Monday, slightly beating Reuters-polled economists' estimates of a 5.1% growth, and decelerating from the 5.4% in the first quarter.
In June, retail sales growth slowed to 4.8% from a year earlier, compared with the 6.4% year-on-year increase in May. That figure also disappointed Reuters-polled economists' forecast of 5.4%.
Industrial output expanded by 6.8% from a year earlier, versus median estimates of 5.7%.
Fixed asset investment grew 2.8% in the first half of this year against estimates of a 3.6% increase in a Reuters poll.
The urban unemployment rate remained at 5% in June, after touching a two-year high of 5.4% in February.
In April, U.S. President Donald Trump ratchet up tariffs on Chinese imports to a prohibitive level of 145%, spurring a round of stimulus measures from Beijing, including financial support for exporters struggling to take orders, subsidies for companies that hire fresh graduates and continuous expansion of a consumer goods trade-in program to boost demand.
The two sides reached a truce in May, agreeing to roll back most of their tariffs on one another. Their respective trade negotiators later outlined a framework after a meeting in London in June, which involves China expediting approval for exports of rare-earth minerals and Washington walking back its restrictions on Beijing's access to advanced American technologies and Chinese students' visas to study in the U.S.
Beijing faces a deadline of Aug. 12 to work out a permanent deal with Washington.
The Chinese leadership in May unveiled a slew of policy steps in its bid to shore up the tariff-hit economy, including cutting interest rates and injecting additional liquidity to the market.
The stimulus measures have helped lift certain aspects of the economy. Both official and private surveys showed an improvement in the manufacturing activity.
Exports have also remained largely resilient in the quarter as businesses accelerated to divert trade to alternative markets. Its U.S.-bound shipment shrank 10.9% this year as of June, while exports to Southeast Asia nations and European Union countries — the groupings China counts as its two largest trading partners — jumped 13% and 6.6%, respectively.
That sent the share of China's exports to the U.S. to 11.9% in the first half of this year, from 14.1% over the same period last year, according to the customs data released Monday.
While China's economy has remained on a generally firm footing this year, buoyed by robust exports and support measures, economists are largely cautious of more economic headwinds ahead, calling for the leadership to launch fresh fiscal stimulus.
PBOC advisor Huang Yiping, in a report published last week with two other economists, said that authorities need to add as much as 1.5 trillion yuan in fiscal stimulus to spur household spending and offset impacts from the U.S. tariffs, as well as cut interest rates further.
While the recent economic data suggested China's economic growth may top 5% in the second quarter, "deeper indicators such as soft consumer price index, weak purchasing managers' index readings, cautious credit dynamics and elevated migrant worker unemployment point to underlying fragility," the economists said.
Structural reforms around China's fiscal plans, pension system and the financial sector are needed to ensure a more balanced, sustainable growth, the economists said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
CoreWeave commits $6 billion to AI data center in Pennsylvania
(Reuters) -Artificial intelligence cloud computing firm CoreWeave said on Tuesday it intends to commit up to $6 billion to build a new data center in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. 登入存取你的投資組合
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Volkswagen halts electric minivan exports to the United States
German auto giant Volkswagen said Thursday it had suspended deliveries of its electric minivan ID. Buzz due to a technical issue amid reports the decision was influenced by costly US tariffs on cars. "No electric ID. Buzz models made in Hanover are currently being delivered to North America due to a technical recall mandated by US authorities," Tobias Riepe, a spokesman for Volkswagen's commercial vehicles division, told AFP. The van's rear seats are "deemed too wide for the vehicle", Riepe said. Citing company insiders, however, German business daily Handelsblatt reported the main reason was high tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump. Manufactured in Hanover, the ID. Buzz has since April been subject to a new US tariff of 25-percent on imported cars that are not largely made within North America. That has made exporting the ID. Buzz into the United States untenable, according to Handelsblatt. Foreign carmakers have scrambled to respond to Trump's levies, with high-end automaker Mercedes-Benz on Monday saying it had delayed some US deliveries in the expectation of tariffs coming back down. Volkswagen itself reported declining US deliveries in the first half of the year, with vehicle shipments plunging 16.2 percent in the three months from April, after the duties came into force. On Wednesday, German chancellor Friedrich Merz said he was "cautiously optimistic" that the United States and European Union could strike a trade agreement by the end of the month that would benefit key German industries like autos and machine-making. jpl-vbw/sea/rl Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Melden Sie sich an, um Ihr Portfolio aufzurufen. Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten


Bloomberg
36 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Bulled-Up US Equity Traders Look Past Threat of a Hot CPI Report
By Stocks traders appear to be shrugging off the possibility of a hotter-than-expected inflation print on Tuesday, leaving them vulnerable if President Donald Trump's trade war leaves its mark on US consumer prices. Bets in options markets show traders expect the S&P 500 Index to swing 0.6% in either direction following the 8:30 a.m. New York time release of June consumer price figures, according to data compiled by Citigroup Inc. That's broadly in line with how much markets have moved during the last two CPI releases, when consumer prices rose less than expected. However, it's well below the average realized move of roughly 0.9% over the past year on those days.