In this The Liberty Daily article, Tyler Durden reports that China’s April economic data came in far weaker than Wall Street expected, raising fresh doubts about Beijing’s ability to prop up domestic growth.
- China’s fixed-asset investment reportedly shrank 1.6% in the first four months of 2026 compared with the previous year.
- Industrial production grew only 4.1% in April, its weakest pace in nearly three years.
- Retail sales rose just 0.2%, the worst reading since China’s post-COVID reopening period in late 2022.
- The article argues that because Chinese economic data is often viewed skeptically as overly polished by Beijing, such poor official numbers may suggest even deeper weakness underneath.
- Analysts from firms including Nomura and SocGen reportedly said Beijing may need stronger policy support to stabilize growth.
- The consumer side of the economy appears especially weak, with sharp declines in autos, furniture, appliances, jewelry, and other household-driven categories.
- China’s export sector remains stronger, especially in strategic manufacturing and technology-related production, but the article frames this as a “two-speed economy.”
- The piece warns that domestic consumption has not shown signs of a meaningful turnaround, even as Beijing remains cautious about major stimulus.
Read the full story: https://thelibertydaily.com/shockingly-bad-chinese-economic-data-stuns-wall-street/




