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China's January Manufacturing PMI Falls to 49.0%, Lunar New Year Lull and Weak Domestic Demand Lead to Consecutive Monthly Contractions

2026-03-04

According to the latest DataTrack data, China's manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) for January 2026 fell to 49.0%, a further decline from 49.3% the previous month, indicating that manufacturing activity has remained below the boom-bust line for two consecutive months. Although the beginning of the year is typically subject to seasonal interference, the PMI figure continuing to trend lower and remaining below 50% reflects that underlying demand remains fragile. Enterprises showed conservative willingness regarding stocking and production ahead of the Lunar New Year, and overall economic momentum has not yet stabilized.

Observing the performance of key sub-indices, both production and new orders indices were suppressed. Influenced by the approaching Lunar New Year holiday in 2026, some factories stopped work and took holidays early, leading to a slowdown in production activities; meanwhile, demand in construction and manufacturing weakened due to cold winter weather. Market information shows that while high-tech manufacturing and equipment manufacturing demonstrated a certain degree of resilience, small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and real estate-related supply chains still face significant difficulties in securing orders and cost pressures, dragging down the overall index performance.

Regarding deep attribution, institutional analysis generally considers "insufficient effective demand" and "seasonal disturbances" as the dual primary causes. According to market analysis, the travel rush home before the Spring Festival caused a temporary tightening of labor supply, and enterprises slowed down their procurement pace to clear inventory. Some analysts also pointed out that although exports maintained a certain level of support, the strength of domestic demand recovery remains weak, causing the supply-demand gap to be difficult to converge rapidly in the short term.

Looking ahead, in the short term (1-2 months), as February coincides with the Spring Festival long holiday, manufacturing PMI is likely to continue hovering at low levels, with data fluctuations mainly dominated by holiday effects. In the medium term (3-6 months), with post-holiday resumption of work and production, as well as the gradual implementation of policies for the opening year of the "15th Five-Year Plan," the market expects Beijing authorities to introduce more active pro-growth measures. This is expected to drive a seasonal rebound in PMI after March and challenge a return to the expansionary zone, though potential risks regarding changes in the global trade environment still need to be monitored.

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