Executive summary
China opened 2026 with stronger-than-expected consumption and industrial activity, supported by a near 22% surge in exports in January-February. Retail sales rose 2.8% year-over-year in the first two months, industrial output climbed 6.3%, and fixed-asset investment increased 1.8% — signs of early momentum that coexist with a persistent property downturn and rising geopolitical energy risks.
Key economic indicators (Jan–Feb 2026)
- Retail sales: +2.8% year-over-year (first two months)
- Industrial output: +6.3% year-over-year
- Exports (outbound shipments): ~+22% year-over-year
- Fixed-asset investment: +1.8% year-over-year
- Real estate development investment: -11.1% year-over-year
- Investment ex-property development: +5.2% year-over-year
- New-home prices (70 major cities): -3.2% year-over-year (February)
- Urban surveyed unemployment rate: 5.3% (first two months; 2025 average 5.2%)
- Official GDP growth target for 2026: 4.5%–5.0%
These indicators present a mix of cyclical strength in consumption and external demand alongside structural weakness in property-related investment.
Drivers: holiday consumption and external demand
China's retail strength in early 2026 reflected a pronounced Lunar New Year effect. Holiday-related spending pushed gains in discretionary categories such as tobacco and alcohol, luxury items including gold and jewelry, hotel bookings and duty-free sales. The extended holiday season shifted more consumer activity into the Jan–Feb reporting window, producing a clear, quotable headline: "Retail sales rose 2.8% in Jan–Feb 2026 despite a moderation from 2025's pace."
Industrial production outperformed consensus estimates and remains a relative bright spot. Strong external demand — particularly from Europe and Southeast Asia — sustained factory activity and supported exports, which surged nearly 22% in the first two months. For traders and commodity strategists, the combination of resilient manufacturing output and an export rebound signals continued demand-driven pressure on industrial commodities and shipping flows.
Investment and the enduring property slump
Fixed-asset investment moved back into positive territory (+1.8% YoY) after a historic slump in 2025 (fixed-asset investment declined 3.8% YoY in 2025). However, that headline masks a bifurcation:
- Real estate development investment remains weak, down 11.1% YoY in Jan–Feb and still a major drag on long-term growth prospects.
- Excluding property development, investment rose 5.2% YoY, driven by infrastructure and manufacturing-related capital spending.
New-home prices across 70 major cities fell 3.2% YoY in February, the steepest decline in eight months. Property sector weakness continues to constrain local government financing and the traditional investment engine that historically supported China’s GDP expansion.
Energy security and geopolitical headwinds
Geopolitical tensions and disruptions in the Middle East introduce near-term energy-price and supply risks that could transmit to inflation and global trade. Relevant datapoints for risk assessment:
- Onshore crude stockpiles: ~1.2 billion barrels (as of January), sufficient to cover roughly 3–4 months of domestic demand.
- Seaborne oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz now account for less than half of China's total oil imports, and flows through Hormuz represent a small share (~6.6%) of China’s total energy consumption.
These measures improve China’s insulation from immediate supply shocks relative to some peers, but a protracted crisis could still raise global oil prices, push up factory-gate costs and damp external demand — all of which would weigh on export-reliant growth.
Market participants should note that analysts adjusted near-term macro assumptions: headline GDP forecasts were trimmed by about 0.1 percentage point in light of higher energy costs, while consumer inflation expectations were revised higher (to roughly 0.9%) and factory-gate prices are projected to rebound about 0.8% in 2026.
Policy posture and downside risks
The leadership set a modest official GDP growth target of 4.5%–5.0% for 2026, signaling a calibrated approach that balances growth support with financial stability priorities. Policymakers are likely to rely more on targeted fiscal measures and selective infrastructure and manufacturing support rather than large-scale, broad-based stimulus.
Persistent downside risks include:
- Prolonged property sector weakness that limits investment and local-government revenues
- Escalating global energy prices that feed into domestic inflation and PPI
- Slower demand in key export markets if geopolitical turmoil depresses Europe and Asia consumption
Implications for traders and institutional investors
- Commodities: Stronger-than-expected industrial output and export volumes support demand for base metals and shipping, but upside may be capped if energy prices spike.
- Fixed income: The property drag and modest GDP target reduce the probability of aggressive monetary easing; credit spreads in property-linked debt may remain under pressure.
- Equities: Export-oriented sectors and industrials look relatively advantaged near term; domestic property and related financial stocks remain vulnerable until balance-sheet repair accelerates.
- FX and rates: Moderate inflation upside increases the likelihood of policy vigilance on rate moves; energy-driven inflation could create transient volatility in currency and sovereign bond markets.
Bottom line
China started 2026 with measurable momentum in consumption, production and exports, but the recovery is uneven. Holiday-driven retail gains and a near 22% export surge underpin early strength, while a deep property contraction and rising energy-related geopolitical risks present meaningful headwinds. For professional traders and institutional investors, the immediate signal is to favor export- and manufacturing-exposed assets while maintaining caution on property-linked exposures and monitoring energy-price developments closely.
Ticker note: GDP remains the central macro benchmark for tracking policy ambition and macro performance in 2026.
