China’s economic slowdown deepens in October as housing slump worsens and investments shrink more than expected

China’s economic slowdown deepens in October as housing slump worsens and investments shrink more than expected


CHENGDU, CHINA – OCTOBER 18: People walk past the Louis Vuitton store at Taikoo Li, a high-end shopping area that combines traditional Sichuan-style architecture with modern luxury retail, on October 18, 2025, in Chengdu, China.

Cheng Xin | Getty Images News | Getty Images

China’s slowdown worsened in October, dragged by soft consumer demand and a deepening property downturn, with the long holiday period further denting factory activity.

Fixed-asset investment, which includes real estate, contracted 1.7% for the first ten months of the year, steepening from a 0.5% decline in the January-to-September period, data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed Friday. Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast a 0.8% drop.

The last time China recorded a contraction in fixed-asset investment was in 2020 during the pandemic, according to data going back to 1992 from Wind Information, a private database focused on the country.

Industrial output expanded 4.9% in October, a slowdown from a 6.5% rise in the prior month, missing expectations for a 5.5% jump.

China’s manufacturing activity contracted more than expected in October, shrinking to the lowest level in six months, as a weeklong holiday, which stretched from Oct. 1 to Oct. 8, shuttered most factories across the country.

Retail sales climbed 2.9% in October from a year earlier, topping expectations for a 2.8% growth in a Reuters poll, but softening from a 3% year-on-year rise in September.

The survey-based urban unemployment rate ticked down to 5.1% last month from 5.2% in September.

Made with Flourish

The sharp drop in fixed-asset investment was largely dragged down by lackluster investment in the property sector and infrastructure, according to Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.

Consumer prices rose 0.2% from a year earlier in October, the strongest inflation reading since January this year and the first positive growth since June, according to LSEG data.

The core CPI, which strips out food and energy, rose 1.2% from a year earlier, the highest since February 2024, according to data provider Wind Information.

China’s exports in October unexpectedly contracted for the first time in nearly two years amid a deepening slump in shipments to the U.S. as tensions with Washington over trade escalated before a deal was reached at the month’s end.

U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping agreed last month to trim their tit-for-tat tariffs and suspend a raft of restrictive measures for one year.

Zhang, however, expects Chinese policymakers to refrain from unveiling further stimulus measures for the remainder of this year, as the economy appears to remain on track to achieve its 5% growth target.

China’s economic growth slowed to 4.8% in the third quarter, following expansions of 5.2% in the second quarter and 5.4% in the first quarter.

This is breaking news. Please refresh for updates.



Source

Big Pharma race to snap up biotech assets as 0 billion patent cliff looms
World

Big Pharma race to snap up biotech assets as $170 billion patent cliff looms

Two employees in pharmaceutical industry wearing protective gloves, mask, cap and white suit seen standing by the machine that is the part of the medicaments production during the working hours in a pharmaceutical manufacturing. Extreme-photographer | E+ | Getty Images A multitude of factors are coming together to bring a big burst in biotech M&A. […]

Read More
CNBC’s UK Exchange newsletter: Is Britain back? Five things to watch for the U.K. in 2026
World

CNBC’s UK Exchange newsletter: Is Britain back? Five things to watch for the U.K. in 2026

This report is from this week’s CNBC’s UK Exchange newsletter. Like what you see? You can subscribe here. The dispatch A new year brings with it optimism for the coming 12 months The main hope for the U.K. must be that 2026 proves to be better — for the economy, households and individual businesses — than […]

Read More
India’s state-owned refiners keep buying Russian oil even as New Delhi seeks U.S. tariff relief
World

India’s state-owned refiners keep buying Russian oil even as New Delhi seeks U.S. tariff relief

An oil refinery, operated by Bharat Petroleum Corp., in Mumbai, India. Dhiraj Singh | Bloomberg | Getty Images State-owned refiners in India are still buying Russian oil, even as New Delhi seeks relief from U.S. tariffs imposed for those purchases, according to energy analysts. The U.S. imposed a “secondary” 25% tariff on Indian goods in […]

Read More