The Prague Post - China retail sales grew at slowest pace in over a year

EUR -
AED 4.276442
AFN 76.273354
ALL 97.000503
AMD 445.145408
ANG 2.084428
AOA 1067.800722
ARS 1639.678479
AUD 1.780745
AWG 2.096009
AZN 1.992038
BAM 1.961163
BBD 2.344101
BDT 142.221368
BGN 1.956892
BHD 0.438973
BIF 3428.651725
BMD 1.164449
BND 1.511634
BOB 8.071072
BRL 6.168551
BSD 1.163828
BTN 103.187168
BWP 16.52118
BYN 3.970612
BYR 22823.207476
BZD 2.340701
CAD 1.633199
CDF 2489.013098
CHF 0.922274
CLF 0.027601
CLP 1082.798081
CNY 8.282437
CNH 8.261815
COP 4365.019941
CRC 584.621327
CUC 1.164449
CUP 30.857908
CVE 111.059321
CZK 24.18014
DJF 206.94606
DKK 7.468173
DOP 74.988815
DZD 151.528662
EGP 54.950716
ERN 17.46674
ETB 178.862324
FJD 2.647783
FKP 0.886868
GBP 0.885593
GEL 3.141256
GGP 0.886868
GHS 12.750757
GIP 0.886868
GMD 85.005026
GNF 10113.242338
GTQ 8.921743
GYD 243.485848
HKD 9.046653
HNL 30.636958
HRK 7.533523
HTG 152.074227
HUF 384.413864
IDR 19457.948822
ILS 3.7567
IMP 0.886868
INR 103.319843
IQD 1525.428663
IRR 49037.875974
ISK 146.988396
JEP 0.886868
JMD 186.750698
JOD 0.825639
JPY 179.903353
KES 150.504601
KGS 101.830779
KHR 4656.416134
KMF 494.890571
KPW 1048.007614
KRW 1693.866205
KWD 0.357067
KYD 0.969852
KZT 608.607849
LAK 25262.729187
LBP 103836.057603
LKR 355.796729
LRD 211.929463
LSL 19.889437
LTL 3.438316
LVL 0.704364
LYD 6.357955
MAD 10.809004
MDL 19.587565
MGA 5240.02222
MKD 61.554569
MMK 2444.848094
MNT 4167.653364
MOP 9.316176
MRU 46.403005
MUR 53.157171
MVR 17.938341
MWK 2021.48388
MXN 21.319207
MYR 4.81209
MZN 74.478106
NAD 19.888437
NGN 1676.446321
NIO 42.817108
NOK 11.655791
NPR 165.099871
NZD 2.047725
OMR 0.447737
PAB 1.163783
PEN 3.923014
PGK 4.797679
PHP 68.750223
PKR 326.918992
PLN 4.232832
PYG 8198.419806
QAR 4.239645
RON 5.083286
RSD 117.170385
RUB 93.971878
RWF 1688.451573
SAR 4.366566
SBD 9.592003
SCR 17.044087
SDG 700.417154
SEK 10.937918
SGD 1.51333
SHP 0.873639
SLE 27.218982
SLL 24417.918709
SOS 665.477653
SRD 44.934928
STD 24101.750759
STN 24.977439
SVC 10.183849
SYP 12875.224817
SZL 19.889163
THB 37.641408
TJS 10.776971
TMT 4.075573
TND 3.438039
TOP 2.803715
TRY 49.288399
TTD 7.868823
TWD 36.255711
TZS 2841.256576
UAH 48.945649
UGX 4259.648647
USD 1.164449
UYU 46.27655
UZS 13979.214298
VES 271.625921
VND 30689.645134
VUV 142.281706
WST 3.275514
XAF 657.755731
XAG 0.021945
XAU 0.000278
XCD 3.146983
XCG 2.097617
XDR 0.820673
XOF 657.913965
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.724393
ZAR 19.835346
ZMK 10481.443952
ZMW 26.09837
ZWL 374.952219
  • RBGPF

    -2.8200

    75.65

    -3.73%

  • SCS

    -0.1300

    15.62

    -0.83%

  • BCC

    -1.1000

    69.18

    -1.59%

  • CMSC

    -0.2500

    23.83

    -1.05%

  • NGG

    0.0600

    78.09

    +0.08%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    14.91

    -0.34%

  • JRI

    -0.1000

    13.77

    -0.73%

  • RIO

    -0.0700

    71.04

    -0.1%

  • GSK

    0.0700

    48.14

    +0.15%

  • BTI

    -1.3400

    54.48

    -2.46%

  • CMSD

    -0.3400

    24.21

    -1.4%

  • RELX

    0.0600

    41.42

    +0.14%

  • BCE

    0.3400

    23.11

    +1.47%

  • AZN

    0.9300

    88.61

    +1.05%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    12.41

    +0.32%

  • BP

    -0.3700

    36.49

    -1.01%

China retail sales grew at slowest pace in over a year
China retail sales grew at slowest pace in over a year / Photo: Adek BERRY - AFP

China retail sales grew at slowest pace in over a year

Retail sales in China grew last month at the slowest pace in over a year, official data showed Friday, highlighting the battle facing authorities' efforts to counteract persistent consumer malaise.

Text size:

The world's second-largest economy has been confronted with sluggish domestic spending since the end of the Covid pandemic, with a prolonged debt crisis in the property sector weighing on sentiment.

Many economists argue that China must shift to a growth model driven more by consumption than infrastructure investment and exports, long the key sources of activity.

Leaders are targeting overall growth in 2025 of five percent, a goal experts say remains within reach despite an apparent slowdown in the latter half of the year.

"External instability and uncertainty factors remain numerous, domestic structural adjustment pressures are significant, and the stable operation of the economy faces many challenges," Fu Linghui, chief economist at the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), told a news conference.

Retail sales rose 2.9 percent on-year last month, data from the NBS showed, slightly lower than the three percent increase recorded in September.

The figure represented the slowest increase since August of last year.

It also marked the fifth straight month of slowing growth since the peak of 6.4 percent reached in May.

The spending slump last month came as Beijing and Washington worked to ease a damaging trade war, with presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping agreeing in October to a one-year truce.

China's exports have largely remained resilient this year despite Washington's tariffs, with a decline in shipments to the United States offset by increases elsewhere, particularly Southeast Asia.

But spurring activity in the domestic economy has been more challenging.

At a Communist Party gathering last month that was focused on economic planning, leaders said the country must "vigorously boost consumption".

Moody's Ratings warned in a report this week that China's "domestic demand may be slow to revive".

After last month's meeting, priorities are "accelerating innovation in strategic technologies and reinforcing domestic demand through structural improvements in income distribution and social safety nets", the report said.

- Factory slowdown -

NBS data also showed factory activity in October fell short of expectations.

Industrial production rose 4.9 percent year-on-year, lower than a Bloomberg forecast of 5.5 percent and the slowest increase since August last year.

"A key drag came from weaker external demand -- export values and industrial sales for export both weakened significantly," Zichun Huang of Capital Economics said in a note about Friday's data.

"We expect the economy to remain weak over the coming quarter," she wrote, adding that Beijing's recent trade truce with Washington "is unlikely to provide much relief".

China's real estate sector has been mired in a debt crisis since 2020, having enjoyed a decades-long construction boom powered by rapid urbanisation and rising living standards.

Friday data showed home values -- a key store of wealth for Chinese households -- continued to decline.

Prices for new residential properties fell year-on-year in October in 61 out of 70 major cities surveyed by the NBS.

"The housing sector still clouds the overall outlook," wrote Sheana Yue, Senior Economist at Oxford Economics.

There is "limited policymaker appetite for new housing stimulus despite fading property momentum" she said, adding that "a nationwide turnaround remains distant".

In another worrying sign for policymakers, fixed-asset investment in the January-October period was down 1.7 percent year-on-year.

The indicator slipped into negative territory in September, falling 0.5 percent year-on-year.

Q.Fiala--TPP