
China's July factory output, retail sales growth slump in blow to economic momentum
The underwhelming data, released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Friday, come as Chinese policymakers navigate pressure on multiple fronts ranging from U.S. President Donald Trump's trade policies to insufficient demand and excessive competition in domestic market.
Industrial output grew 5.7% year-on-year in July, the lowest reading since November 2024, and compared with a 6.8% rise in June. It missed forecasts for a 5.9% increase in a Reuters poll.
A temporary trade truce reached between China and the United States in mid-May, which was extended by another 90-days this week, has prevented U.S. tariff rates on Chinese goods from reaching triple-digit levels. However, Chinese manufacturers' profits continue to take a hit from subdued demand and factory-gate deflation at home.
Data released earlier this month by the NBS showed that the producer price index fell 3.6% year-on-year in July, matching the near two-year low recorded in June.
Beijing has recently stepped up policy measures and made pledges to prop up domestic consumption and curb excessive price competition, as authorities strive to lift economic growth towards the government's 2025 target of around 5%.
Retail sales, a gauge of consumption, expanded 3.7% in July, the slowest reading since December 2024, slowing from a 4.8% rise in the previous month and missing forecasts of a 4.6% gain.
Fixed asset investment grew 1.6% in the first seven months of the year from the same period last year, compared with an expected 2.7% rise. It had expanded 2.8% in the first half.
The world's second-largest economy has so far avoided a sharp slowdown in part due to policy support and as factories took advantage of the U.S.-China trade truce to front-load shipments, but analysts say weak demand at home and global risks will drag on growth in coming quarters.
Economic activity has also been impacted by extreme weather, from record-breaking heat to storms and floods across the country, disrupting factory production and day-to-day business operations.
The latest Reuters poll projected China's GDP growth to slow to 4.5% in the third quarter and 4.0% in the fourth, suggesting that Beijing has its work cut out in getting households to spend more at a time of uncertainty over job security and mounting headwinds from Trump's global trade war.
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.
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'Export controls are a frontline defense in protecting our national security, and we should not set a precedent that incentivizes the government to grant licenses to sell China technology that will enhance AI capabilities,' said John Moolenaar, a Republican US representative from Michigan, in a statement. But Trump's gut-reaction to dealmaking seems focused on the wallet. On Wednesday, US treasury secretary Scott Bessent praised the arrangement and suggested it could be extended to other industries over time. 'I think that right now this is unique, but now that we have the model and the beta test, why not expand it?' he told Bloomberg. Julia Powles, executive director of the Institute for Technology, Law and Policy at the University of California, Los Angeles, said the deal opens up questions of whether similar pressure can be applied to other tech companies. 'What other quid pro quo might be asked in the future? The quid pro quo that would be of great concern to the [tech] sector is anything that reduces their reputation for privacy and security,' Powles said. 'That's thinking of government like a transactional operator, not like an institution with rules about when, how and for what it can extract taxes, levies and subsidies.' But that seems to be how the White House runs now. When explaining to the press how he made the deal, Trump said he told Huang: 'I want 20% if I'm going to approve this for you'. 'For the country, for our country. I don't want it myself,' the president added. 'And he said, 'Would you make it 15?' So we negotiated a little deal.'