China’s producer and consumer inflation rose faster than expected in March

China’s producer and consumer inflation rose faster than expected in March


A worker works on a bread production line in Zaozhuang, East China’s Shandong Province, April 7, 2022. China’s factory inflation slowed but beat expectations in March, official data showed on Monday.

Costfoto | Future Publishing | Getty Images

China’s factory inflation slowed but beat expectations in March, official data showed on Monday, as the country grapples with cost pressures caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and persistent supply chain bottlenecks.

The producer price index (PPI) increased 8.3% year-on-year, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), easing from 8.8% growth in February but beating a forecast for a 7.9% rise in a Reuters poll.

While the year-on-year PPI rise was the slowest since April 2021, the monthly increase of 1.1% was the fastest pace in five months.

China’s consumer price index (CPI) inched up 1.5% year-on-year, the fastest pace in three months, after a gain of 0.9% in February and beating the 1.2% rise tipped by a Reuters poll.

The world’s second-largest economy came under downward pressure in March with renewed Covid-19 outbreaks and the manufacturing and service sectors reporting declines in activity.

Authorities have unveiled policies to support the economy, including greater fiscal spending and reductions in income tax for small firms.

China’s cabinet on Wednesday vowed more support measures for consumption and investment.

Against a year ago, food prices fell 1.5%, compared with a 3.9% decline in February, resulting in a drop of 0.28 percentage points in headline CPI.

Read more about China from CNBC Pro

The still modest consumer inflation points to weak demand as the sentiment in consumption was dented by Beijing’s strict Covid-19 control measures.

China reported 26,411 new asymptomatic cases for Sunday, more than 25,000 were in the financial hub of Shanghai, currently under a city-wide lockdown.

Iris Pang, chief economist for Greater China at ING, expects Shanghai’s economy will shrink 6% this month alone if the current lockdown persists, equaling a 2% gross domestic product decline for the whole of China.

Most analysts expect China’s central bank to lower borrowing costs, and cut reserve requirements for banks or lower interest rate to pump more cash into the economy.



Source

Data center deals hit record  billion in 2025 as AI valuation risks and funding concerns grip investors
World

Data center deals hit record $61 billion in 2025 as AI valuation risks and funding concerns grip investors

Global data centers dealmaking surged to hit another record high this year, driven by a rush to build out the infrastructure required for energy-intensive AI workloads. That surge came even as investors grew increasingly wary of inflated artificial intelligence valuations and the financing underpinning the rapid expansion of data centers. Global stocks sold off in […]

Read More
Puma shares fall 2% after Nike earnings rattle markets; European stocks mixed
World

Puma shares fall 2% after Nike earnings rattle markets; European stocks mixed

European shares opened mixed on Friday, as investors digested a swathe of interest rate decisions and looked ahead to crunch budget talks in France. The pan-European Stoxx 600 was little changed by 8:25 a.m. in London, with most major regional bourses trading flat. Looking at individual stocks, sportswear giants Puma and Adidas were 1.9% and […]

Read More
India’s ICICI Prudential AMC sees shares jump 20% in market debut after stellar IPO
World

India’s ICICI Prudential AMC sees shares jump 20% in market debut after stellar IPO

Signage at an ICICI Prudential Asset Management Co. branch in Delhi, India, on Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. ICICI Prudential AMC’s initial public offering to raise as much as 106 billion rupees ($1.2 billion) received bids for more than 1.37 billion shares, compared with 35.02 million offered, at close on last day of the sale Tuesday, […]

Read More