- China’s retail sales fell 0.6% year-on-year in May, the first contraction since the Covid reopening in late 2022, while fixed-asset investment shrank 4.1% in the first five months — worse than forecast.
- Industrial production rose 4.5%, driven by AI-related exports and high-tech manufacturing; semiconductor exports soared 111% and high-tech manufacturing output jumped 15% — but the gains are masking deep demand-side weakness.
- Private capital expenditure fell 7.1% in the first five months of 2026, the worst pace since 2020; manufacturing investment declined for the first time in six years.
- Some analysts now estimate Q2 GDP growth near 4%, tracking below Beijing’s official full-year target of 4.5%–5%; the yuan weakened and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng China index fell ~1.3% after the data release.
What Happened?
China’s May economic data revealed a widening split between a roaring supply side and a stalling domestic economy. Retail sales contracted 0.6% from a year ago — the first decline since China emerged from Covid lockdowns in late 2022 — led by a 16% plunge in car purchases and double-digit drops in home appliances and construction materials. Fixed-asset investment shrank 4.1% in the first five months of the year, worse than expected, with private capex down 7.1% — the worst pace since 2020. Meanwhile, industrial production accelerated to 4.5% growth, powered by booming AI-related exports: semiconductor overseas sales surged 111%, electronics output jumped 17%, and high-tech manufacturing grew 15%.
Why It Matters?
China’s economy has effectively split in two. The export-facing, AI-adjacent manufacturing sector is thriving on a global technology investment supercycle. Everything touching domestic consumers — housing, retail, services — remains under severe pressure from a persistent property crisis and a fragile job market. This imbalance is structurally dangerous: an export boom that isn’t translating into domestic income growth or consumer confidence means China remains dependent on foreign demand rather than the self-sustaining consumption engine Beijing has long sought to build. Home prices fell at a faster pace in May, further eroding household wealth and sentiment. The yuan weakened on the data release, and Hong Kong equities sold off, signaling markets are taking the weakness seriously despite official reassurances.
What’s Next?
Economists are increasingly expecting Beijing to respond with monetary and fiscal stimulus in the second half of 2026, with rate cuts and reserve requirement ratio reductions likely if oil prices remain low following the Iran deal. The government has taken a wait-and-see approach in recent months, encouraged by a strong Q1 GDP print of 5%, but May’s data makes inaction harder to justify. The key question is whether the AI-export boom can sustain overall growth long enough for domestic demand to recover — or whether the consumption shortfall will eventually drag the broader economy down with it.
Source: Bloomberg














