
Chinese economy grows 5.2%, beats expectations on strong exports; US tariff risks loom
The world's No. 2 economy has so far avoided a sharp slowdown in part due to policy support and as factories take advantage of a U.S.-China trade truce to front-load shipments, but investors are bracing for a weaker second half as exports lose momentum, prices continue to fall, and consumer confidence remains low.
Policymakers face a daunting task in achieving the annual growth target of around 5% - a goal many analysts view as ambitious given entrenched deflation and weak demand at home.
Data on Tuesday showed China's gross domestic product (GDP) grew 5.2% in the April-June quarter from a year earlier, slowing from 5.4% in the first quarter, but just ahead of analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll for a rise of 5.1%.
"China achieved growth above the official target of 5% in Q2 partly because of front loading of exports," said Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.
'The above target growth in Q1 and Q2 gives the government room to tolerate some slowdown in the second half of the year.'
China's blue-chip CSI300 Index reversed course to trade down 0.1%, while Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng cut gains after the data came in, trading up 0.7%.
On a quarterly basis, GDP grew 1.1% in April-June, the National Bureau of Statistics data showed, compared with a forecast 0.9% increase and a 1.2% gain in the previous quarter.
Investors are closely watching for signs of fresh stimulus at the upcoming Politburo meeting due in late July, which is likely to shape economic policy for the remainder of the year.
Beijing has ramped up infrastructure spending and consumer subsidies, alongside steady monetary easing. In May, the central bank cut interest rates and injected liquidity as part of broader efforts to cushion the economy from U.S. President Donald Trump's trade tariffs.
Further monetary easing is expected in the coming months, while some analysts believe the government could ramp up deficit spending if growth slows sharply.
Separate June activity data also released on Tuesday underlined the pressure on consumers. While industrial output grew 6.8% year-on-year last month - the fastest pace since March, retail sales growth slowed down to 4.8%, from 6.4% in May and hitting the lowest since January-February.
Indeed, the headline GDP numbers held little sway for most households including 30-year-old doctor Mallory Jiang, in southern tech hub Shenzhen, who says she and her husband both had pay cuts this year.
"Both our incomes as doctors have decreased, and we still don't dare buy an apartment. We are cutting back on expenses: commuting by public transport, eating at the hospital cafeteria or cooking at home. My life pressure is still actually quite high."
China observers and analysts say stimulus alone may not be enough to tackle entrenched deflationary pressures, with producer prices in June falling at their fastest pace in nearly two years.
Zichun Huang, China economist at Capital Economics, said the GDP data "probably still overstate the strength of growth."
"And with exports set to slow and the tailwind from fiscal support on course to fade, growth is likely to slow further during the second half of this year."
Data on Monday showed China's exports regained some momentum in June as factories rushed out shipments to capitalise on a fragile tariff truce between Beijing and Washington ahead of a looming August deadline.
The latest Reuters poll projected GDP growth to slow to 4.5% in the third quarter and 4.0% in the fourth, underscoring mounting economic headwinds as U.S. President Donald Trump's global trade war leaves Beijing with the tough task of getting households to spend more at a time of uncertainty.
China's 2025 GDP growth is forecast to cool to 4.6% - falling short of the official goal - from last year's 5.0% and ease even further to 4.2% in 2026, according to the poll.
China's property downturn remained a drag on overall growth despite multiple rounds of support measures, with investment in the sector falling sharply in the first six months, while new home prices in June tumbled at the fastest monthly pace in eight months.
Fixed-asset investment also grew at a slower-than-expected 2.8% pace in the first six months year-on-year, from 3.7% in January-May.
The softer investment outturn reflected the broader economic uncertainty, with China's crude steel output in June falling 9.2% from the year before, as more steelmakers carried out equipment maintenance amid seasonally faltering demand.
"Q3 growth is at risk without stronger fiscal stimulus," said Dan Wang, China director at Eurasia Group in Singapore.
'Both consumers and businesses have turned more cautious, while exporters are increasingly looking overseas for growth.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India Today
a minute ago
- India Today
Is US economy nearing recession? July jobs report shows rise in unemployment rate
US job growth in July 2025 fell short of expectations, delivering a sharp blow to economists and unsettling financial markets. According to a closely watched Labor Department report released on Friday and cited by Reuters, nonfarm payrolls added just 73,000 jobs last month, well below expectations, while employment gains from May and June were revised downward by a staggering 258, unemployment rate also ticked up to 4.2 per cent from 4.1 per cent, signalling that the once-resilient labor market may finally be cracking under market strength had been a main support for the U.S. economy, helping it hold up against high inflation and tough policies from the Trump administration, such as new tariffs and strict immigration measures. But the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data paints a troubling picture of a cooling job market, raising the specter of a looming the most startling revelation in the report wasn't July's weak job creation alone, but the massive downward revisions to previous job gains were cut from 144,000 to just 19,000, and June's numbers were slashed from 147,000 to a paltry 14, Freeze Signals Broader SlowdownThe three-month average for job gains has now dropped to just 35,000, a sharp drop from monthly averages exceeding 240,000 in like retail, tech, and manufacturing are reporting either stagnant hiring or outright layoffs. Wage growth is also slowing, job openings are declining, and the unemployment uptick marks a critical turning point for analysts who had seen labor data as a key measure of economic resilience.'This is the slowdown we've been bracing for,' said Luke Tilley, chief economist at Wilmington Trust. 'Firms are adjusting to a very different cost structure and holding off on hiring.'Trump's Tariffs: A Major Obstacle to GrowthPresident Donald Trump's sweeping 2025 tariff agenda is emerging as a key factor weighing down job creation. The average US tariff rate has surged to between 18 per cent and 21per cent, the highest in over a to the Penn Wharton Budget Model, the long-run effect could be a 6 per cen reduction in GDP and a 5 per cen decline in real wages. Middle-income households may lose an estimated USD 22,000 in lifetime Tax Foundation compares the tariffs to a stealth tax hike, estimating they could shrink 2025 GDP by 0.8% and cost households between $1,200 and $1,600 this year alone. Higher input costs—up 2% to 4.5% in some sectors—are pressuring businesses to scale back hiring or cut jobs Under Pressure to PivotWith inflation still stuck between 2.6 per cent and 2.8 per cent, the Federal Reserve has been trying to strike a careful balance. But the sudden slowdown in the job market may push it to to CME Group data, investors now see a 75.5 per cent chance the Fed will cut interest rates in September—up from just 40 per cent the day before the jobs report came central bank had been using strong employment numbers to justify holding rates steady. Now, the dramatic slowdown in hiring may compel policymakers to act to prevent a deeper economic all sectors fared equally. Healthcare, construction, and government continued to post modest job gains, but at a slower pace. Meanwhile, tech, retail, and manufacturing either stagnated or saw declines in hiring.A Turning Point for the Economy?The July jobs report may mark the moment when a soft landing slipped out of reach. With hiring slowing, jobless claims ticking upward, and consumer spending dampened by inflation and higher costs due to tariffs, many economists believe the second half of 2025 could see the US slipping closer to, or even into a recession.'This report is a gamechanger,' said Heather Long, chief economist at Navy Federal Credit Union, via CNBC. 'The labor market is deteriorating quickly.'- Ends


The Hindu
a minute ago
- The Hindu
Indian fuel exports escape Trump's tariff net, no Russian penalty yet
India's exports of petroleum products such as diesel and jet fuel to the U.S. continue to be exempted from the levy of any import duty or tariff, and President Donald Trump has, for now, not indicated the penalty he plans to impose to deter New Delhi's energy trade with Russia. On Wednesday, Mr. Trump had announced plans to impose a 25% tariff on India, along with an additional penalty, citing concerns over the country's energy and defence ties with Russia, as well as existing trade barriers. However, the executive order he signed thereafter only gives effect to the 25% tariff on Indian goods coming to the U.S. Even this has an exclusion list that includes finished pharmaceutical products (tablets, injectables and syrups), active pharmaceutical ingredients, electronics and ICT goods (semiconductors, smartphones, SSDs and computers), and petroleum products (crude oil, LNG, refined fuels, electricity and coal). The executive order also does not indicate any penalty that is to be levied for Russian trade. According to official data, India exported 4.86 million tonnes of petroleum products to the U.S. in fiscal year 2024-25 (April 2024 to March 2025) for over $4 billion. Reliance Industries Ltd is the biggest exporter of fuel to the U.S. With fuel exports continuing to be on the exemption list, it means business as usual for India and companies like Reliance, analysts said. Also, a relief would be if no penalty is imposed to punish India for its oil imports from Russia, they said, adding that for now, the U.S. administration has not indicated any penalty. "For now, there is nothing but you never know," an analyst said. From just 0.2% before the Russia-Ukraine war to now accounting for 35-40% of total crude imports, India's reliance on Russian oil has surged — drawing fresh scrutiny with Mr. Trump announcing a penalty on top of a 25% tariff, or tax, on all goods going to the U.S. India historically bought most of its oil from the Middle East, including Iraq and Saudi Arabia. However, things changed when Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. India, the world's third-largest crude importer after China and the U.S., began snapping up Russian oil that was available at a discount after some in the West shunned it as a means to punish Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine. From a market share of just 0.2% in India's import basket before the start of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Russia overtook Iraq and Saudi Arabia to become India's No.1 supplier, with a share as high as 40% at one point of time. This month, Russia supplied 36% of all crude oil, which is converted into fuels like petrol and diesel, that India imported. Announcing the imposition of 25% tariff or tax on all Indian goods going to the U.S., Mr. Trump had said New Delhi "always bought a vast majority of their military equipment from Russia, and are Russia's largest buyer of energy, along with China, at a time when everyone wants Russia to STOP THE KILLING IN UKRAINE." "India will therefore be paying a tariff of 25%, plus a penalty for the above (Russian purchases), starting on August First," he said in a post on social media. India bought 68,000 barrels per day of crude oil from Russia in January 2022, according to global real-time data and analytics provider Kpler. That month, Indian imports from Iraq were 1.23 million bpd and 883,000 bpd from Saudi Arabia. In June 2022, Russia overtook Iraq to become India's largest oil supplier. That month, it supplied 1.12 million bpd as compared to 993,000 bpd that came from Iraq and 695,000 bpd from Saudi Arabia. Russian imports peaked to 2.15 million bpd in May 2023 and have varied since then, depending on the discount at which the oil was available. But the volumes never slipped below 1.4 million bpd, which is more than what India was buying from its top supplier Iraq before the Russia-Ukraine conflict. In July, imports from Russia averaged 1.8 million bpd, almost double of 950,000 bpd imports from Iraq. Saudi imports stood at 630,000 bpd, according to Kpler. After the Ukraine war, Western energy sanctions against Russia pushed it to cut prices for those buyers still willing to purchase its crude. The discounts on Russia's flagship Urals crude to Brent — the world's most well-known benchmark — were as high as $40 per barrel at one point but have been trimmed since to less than $ 3. G7 countries in December 2022 imposed a $60 per barrel price cap on Russian crude. Under the mechanism, European companies were permitted to transport and insure shipments of Russian oil to third countries as long as it is sold below the capped price — an effort to limit the impact of the sanctions on global oil flows but ensure Russia earns less from the trade. Last month, the European Union decided to lower the price cap to $47.6 and introduced an automatic and dynamic mechanism for its review in the future. The idea is to keep the cap at 15% lower than the average market price. In addition to stoking India's economy, cheap Russian oil gave refiners lucrative business — refining that crude and exporting the products to deficit countries. These included the European Union, which had banned direct crude oil purchases from Russia. This month, the European Union decided to ban the import of refined oil produced from Russian crude.


The Hindu
a minute ago
- The Hindu
Letters to The Editor — August 2, 2025
Misplaced remark U.S. President Donald Trump's remark, calling India a 'dead economy', is both inaccurate and disappointing, especially when leading global institutions continue to recognise India as among the fastest-growing major economies. That the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank have all projected India's economic stability is a clear indication of economic vitality, not decline. With a young and dynamic population — in sharp contrast to aging demographics and slowing growth in many advanced economies, India's demographic strength, combined with prudent macroeconomic policies and digital advancement, positions it as a key driver of future global growth. Mr. Trump's comments appear to be politically charged rather than fact-based. Rukma Sharma, Jalandhar, Punjab What is odious is that Mr. Trump did not stop with just announcing tariffs. He has revived the U.S's old myopic game of trying to maintain a geo-political strategic balance in South Asia by supporting Pakistan, India's war-happy neighbour. One cannot but notice the fact that Mr Trump has been upping the ante against India ever since it successfully carried out post-Pahalgam retaliatory strikes against Pakistan's terror infrastructure. That India proved its military prowess with minimum collateral damage and the use of indigenous armaments has not gone down well with the Trump administration. Nalini Vijayaraghavan, Thiruvananthapuram The cartoon (Inside pages, 'On the draw' August 1), on Mr. Trump's decision, may be a correct portrayal. The U.S. President is publicity savvy and wants to take the credit when it comes to all major global events. He wants the Nobel Prize and has shamelessly expressed his desire. He is just another politician and not a statesman. Imposing shockingly high tariffs will hurt the business of the exporters to the United States of America, which will, in turn, affect the economies of many countries. Mr. Trump does not care one bit about the sufferings of others. He is whimsical, which is a bad trait for anyone in power. Here is an elected leader who is an example of how one should not be. V. Lakshmanan, Tirupur, Tamil Nadu One cannot help notice these contrasts — ISRO and NASA have successfully launched their NISAR satellite into orbit, which highlights the power of science and cooperation, but the U.S. President seems intent on giving pinpricks to India and the Indian government. One wonders how things will play out. Dhanaraj S., Bodinayakanur, Tamil Nadu The debate in Parliament The parliamentary debate on Operation Sindoor unfolded as expected, with few surprises. The ruling party remained determined to portray the operation as an unqualified success, while key questions raised by the Opposition were left unanswered. Vital issues deserving serious deliberation such as Mr. Trump's repeated claims of brokering a ceasefire, and the alarming security lapses in Pahalgam were largely ignored. From the outset, the ruling party's reluctance to engage in a substantive debate was unmistakable. Repeated references to events under the past dispensation did little more than deflect attention from the core concerns. One can only hope that future parliamentary discussions will rise above partisan posturing and offer genuine, meaningful exchanges. V. Nagarajan, Chennai Civic responsibility India-Bangladesh relations may be strained but there are areas of policy in that country which may be worth considering in India. I recently came across a video on YouTube, on an organisation called BD Clean ( It is a platform of 50,000 volunteers who work with the aim of ensuring a clean Bangladesh and bringing about a change in mentality in the disposal of garbage. The transformation in the country has been spectacular with heavily polluted areas undergoing remarkable transformations. It is an idea that is worth emulating in Indian cities and towns. V. Subramaniam, Chennai