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China's recovery remains distinctly externally driven, with domestic demand continuing to lag behind industrial output.

In Brief

  • China’s real GDP grew 5.0% year-over-year in 1Q 2026, recovering from 4.5% in late 2025 and hitting the upper end of the government's target range, driven primarily by a 14.7% surge in exports and high-tech manufacturing.
  • While inflation indicators showed a tentative rebound that could signal the end of a prolonged deflationary cycle, domestic demand remains weak.
  • Policymakers remain committed to structural transformation over broad stimulus, presenting distinct equity opportunities in "new quality productive forces" such as artificial intelligence (AI) and semiconductors, while consumer sectors warrant a more cautious near-term approach.

Export-led recovery masks lingering domestic vulnerabilities

The Chinese National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reported real GDP growth of 5.0% year-over-year in 1Q 2026, marking a solid recovery from the 4.5% recorded in 4Q 2025, which had been the weakest pace in three years. While the headline number is highly encouraging and sits comfortably at the upper end of the government's 4.5%–5% target range, the underlying composition of this growth reveals a two-speed economy. The recovery remains distinctly externally driven, with domestic demand continuing to lag behind industrial output.

The economic engine was primarily fueled by robust external demand, with total exports surging 14.7% year-over-year in the first quarter. Exports of integrated circuits, computer equipment, automobiles, and ships maintained high-speed growth trajectories. Correspondingly, import growth for intermediate products in the electromechanical and integrated circuit industries remained elevated, underscoring China's deeply entrenched position in the global technology supply chain. However, investors should note that the export growth rate dropped significantly in March compared to the first two months. This deceleration is likely tied to the high base effect caused by "front-loading" exports during the same period last year. While subsequent growth is expected to normalize, escalating geopolitical tensions, particularly in the Middle East, pose potential tail risks to China's export momentum that warrant close monitoring.

Tech-led industrial production aligns with structural transformation

Driven by this strong external demand, industrial value-added for enterprises above a designated size grew 6.1% year-over-year in 1Q 2026. The internal dynamics of this growth perfectly illustrate Beijing's current policy priorities: high-tech manufacturing industries expanded at an impressive 12.5%, and equipment-related industries grew at 8.9%. This divergence highlights the government's strategic pivot toward advanced manufacturing and its aggressive "artificial intelligence+" initiative.

Crucially, this data underscores that the Chinese government is pinning its hopes for long-term economic vitality on structural transformation and industrial upgrading rather than traditional stimulus policies. Policymakers are actively avoiding "flood-like" stimulus measures. Currently, fiscal support is maintained largely through the front-loaded issuance of government bonds to ensure baseline internal stability. Consequently, the growth rate of broader social financing continues to hit new lows, with government bond financing acting as the dominant pillar while corporate and household loan growth remains tepid. 

Domestic demand lags as inflation marks a tentative turning point

On the domestic front, consumption still faces significant headwinds. Retail sales grew 2.4% year-over-year in 1Q 2026, a modest improvement from late 2025, but momentum faded visibly toward the end of the quarter, with March retail sales growth slowing to just 1.7%. As the base effect from last year's government consumption subsidies materializes, downward pressure is likely to persist. With the government allocating CNY 250billion in consumption subsidies this year (down from CNY 300billion in 2025), a robust consumer recovery remains uncertain. Similarly, while overall fixed-asset investment turned positive to 1.7% in 1Q 2026, driven largely by advanced manufacturing and efforts to resolve local government debt, the property sector remains a structural drag. Despite isolated signs of price rebounds in tier-1 cities, nationwide real estate activity remains pressured as the government remains reluctant to introduce substantive property stimulus.

However, the recovery in inflation data offers a glimmer of hope. In March 2026, headline CPI rose to 1% year-over-year, and Producer Price Index (PPI) climbed to 0.5%. This tentative turning point might signify the end of the prolonged deflationary cycle that began in October 2022, offering a much-needed boost to the cash flow and profitability of manufacturing enterprises. Yet, structurally, this inflation recovery was concentrated in upstream sectors, highly correlated with global AI infrastructure demand and rising crude oil prices, rather than domestic consumption. It will take another one or two quarters of data to confirm whether this recovery can be sustained and transmitted to household income.

Investment implications

The recent data release confirms that China's overall growth stayed relatively firm in the first quarter of 2026, buoyed by resilient exports and a nascent turnaround in domestic investment. For investors, this solid headline print suggests there is no immediate urgency for broad-based stimulus, effectively reducing the likelihood of a dovish policy shift at the upcoming April Politburo meeting.

Investors should continue to anticipate increased resource allocation toward "new quality productive forces." Sectors including integrated circuits, AI, aerospace, biopharmaceuticals, and the low-altitude economy are demonstrably driving both export growth and industrial output, making them prime candidates for sustained policy tailwinds. Conversely, consumer sectors face a more challenging near-term outlook given the fading subsidy impulse, weak income growth, and the structural difficulty of redistributing economic gains to households under the current framework.

At the current juncture, investor sentiment will likely continue to swing between quality and liquidity during times of geopolitical tension, while bargain hunting when macroeconomic data offers glimmers of hope. Investors should maintain a long-term perspective, utilizing market corrections as strategic opportunities to build positions in both the U.S. and APAC equities, with a particular focus on Chinese equities that align with state priorities.

Stock selection will be paramount. Portfolios should emphasize companies with defensible competitive advantages and proven execution capabilities, while favor firms with demonstrable pricing power, deep ecosystem moats, and disciplined capital expenditure through the economic cycle. Leaders in AI, semiconductors, quantum computing, 6G infrastructure, internet platforms, the green economy, and robotics are exceptionally well-positioned to benefit as risk-on sentiment gradually improves and China's structural transformation matures.

 

 

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