China's economic slowdown deepened in May as fixed-asset investment contracted twice as fast as expected and retail sales fell for the first time in more than three years.
China's economic slowdown deepened in May as fixed-asset investment contracted twice as fast as expected and retail sales fell for the first time in more than three years.

China's economic slowdown deepened in May as fixed-asset investment contracted twice as fast as expected and retail sales fell for the first time in more than three years.
China's fixed-asset investment contracted 4.1% in the first five months of 2026, double the 2% decline economists had forecast, as a deepening property slump and weakening consumer demand dragged on the world's second-largest economy.
"The domestic imbalance between strong supply and weak demand is acute," the National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement, calling for greater employment support and the development of new technologies to achieve "an appropriate increase in economic output."
The January-to-May reading marked a sharp acceleration from the 1.6% contraction in the first four months and a reversal from the 1.7% growth in the first quarter. Real estate development investment plunged 16.2% in the period, deepening from the 13.7% drop through April. Manufacturing investment fell 0.4%, its first contraction since December 2020, while infrastructure investment eked out 0.6% growth. Retail sales declined 0.6% in May from a year earlier, the first monthly drop since December 2022 and below the 0% consensus estimate.
The data highlights the K-shaped nature of China's recovery, where strong manufacturing and exports — industrial output rose 4.5% in May, beating the 4.3% estimate — mask persistent weakness in property and consumption. With the property downturn showing no signs of bottoming and consumer confidence fragile, expectations are building for more aggressive stimulus from the People's Bank of China.
Private investment retreats as state spending fails to fill the gap
Private fixed-asset investment fell 7.1% in the January-to-May period, extending a decline that highlights the lack of confidence among non-state enterprises. By region, the contraction was broad-based: eastern China fell 6.4%, central China dropped 2.9%, western China declined 6.6%, and the northeast — already the weakest region — plunged 17.5%. Foreign-invested enterprises cut spending by 4.3%, while Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan-invested firms reduced investment by 8.7%.
The only bright spots came from state-directed spending. High-tech industry investment rose 4.5%, led by computer and office equipment manufacturing at 18.3%, aerospace and aircraft equipment at 16.7%, and information services at 13.8%. Water transport investment jumped 23.3% and air transport rose 21.7%, reflecting continued government infrastructure spending.
Cross-asset implications for global investors
The deepening contraction in Chinese investment has direct consequences for global commodity markets. Iron ore, copper, steel and cement — the raw materials of fixed-asset investment — face softer demand as China's construction pipeline shrinks. The 16.2% plunge in real estate investment alone suggests developers are still prioritizing debt repayment over new projects, despite two years of policy support from Beijing.
On a month-on-month basis, May fixed-asset investment fell 1.91%, the fastest pace of monthly decline this year, suggesting the deterioration is accelerating rather than stabilizing. The last time China's FAI contracted this sharply was during the initial Covid lockdowns in early 2020, when the economy contracted 6.8% in the first quarter.
For currency markets, the weakening domestic demand backdrop adds to the case for PBoC easing. The onshore yuan has remained relatively stable, but the divergence between China's dovish monetary stance and the hawkish bias at the Federal Reserve continues to pressure the currency. Chinese 10-year government bond yields have fallen to 1.75%, near the lowest outside Switzerland, as abundant liquidity and muted inflation expectations drive a bond rally that has drawn foreign buyers seeking portfolio diversification.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.