Key Takeaways:
- China June CPI rose 1.0% YoY, missing 1.1% consensus estimate.
- PPI accelerated to 4.1% YoY, in line with forecasts.
- Core CPI held at 1.0% as consumer demand remained subdued.
Key Takeaways:

China's consumer price index rose 1 percent in June from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics said Thursday, missing the 1.1 percent median estimate in a Reuters poll and slowing from 1.2 percent in May. Core CPI, which excludes food and energy prices, also rose 1 percent. On a monthly basis, CPI fell 0.3 percent, reflecting seasonal factors and lower international crude oil prices, the bureau said.
"Consumer sentiment remains subdued as households continue to grapple with the negative wealth effect stemming from the prolonged housing downturn," said Neo Wang, China strategist at Evercore ISI.
The producer price index jumped 4.1 percent from a year earlier, in line with economists' forecasts and accelerating from 3.9 percent in May. Month over month, PPI declined 0.3 percent, suggesting upstream cost pressures are beginning to ease. Factory-gate prices had returned to growth in March after the Middle East conflict helped end one of China's longest deflationary streaks in decades. Beyond war-led commodity supply disruptions, wholesale prices were also lifted by growing demand for artificial intelligence computing power, pushing up prices for tech equipment and semiconductors.
The data presents a delicate picture for policymakers. Moderate consumer inflation leaves room for accommodative monetary policy, while the moderation in producer prices could signal cooling industrial demand. The International Monetary Fund on Wednesday raised its 2026 growth forecast for China to 4.6 percent from 4.4 percent, citing strong high-tech manufacturing and export performance. Yet many investors view the two-speed growth — strong exports versus weak consumption and a housing downturn — as a defining long-term feature of the economy, Wang said.
The export and manufacturing-led economic resilience is expected to reinforce Beijing's reluctance to roll out major stimulus to revive tepid consumer demand, said Gabriel Wildau, managing director at Teneo. "Policymakers are likely to refrain from major new stimulus unless the slowdown persists beyond the conflict," Wildau said, pointing to a top policy meeting by the 24-member Politburo in late July as "the next opportunity to escalate policy stimulus."
June's official manufacturing PMI showed input cost inflation easing to a six-month low of 54.2 from 60.5 in May, while the output price sub-index fell to 48.2 from 51.9 — the first contraction this year. That signals a pullback in both upstream and downstream industrial prices that had surged during the war-driven commodity rally. China has set a modest growth target of 4.5 percent to 5 percent for this year.
The last time China's CPI moderated while PPI accelerated in a similar pattern was in mid-2023, when the economy faced a post-reopening demand slump that eventually prompted the PBoC to cut key policy rates. With the Politburo meeting scheduled for late July, markets will watch for any shift in Beijing's approach to supporting domestic consumption. The onshore yuan traded near 7.25 per dollar Thursday morning after the data release, while the CSI 300 index edged lower as investors weighed the implications of tepid domestic demand against resilient export activity.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.