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China's February PPI YoY Strongly Turns Positive at 0.5%, Ending Over Three Years of Deflation Haze

2026-04-10

According to the latest DataTrack data, the year-on-year (YoY) growth rate of China's Producer Price Index (PPI) for February 2026 recorded 0.5%. This not only surged significantly from -0.9% in January but also shattered the market's previous consensus estimate of a -1.1% decline. The turning positive of this data holds absolute benchmark significance, officially ending the gloom of industrial product deflation that had lasted for over three consecutive years since October 2022. Although some external search data still misstates this month's figure or remains stuck at the predicted -0.9%, according to the authoritative DataTrack series, China's PPI has indeed ushered in a robust recovery of 0.5%.

Delving into the key forces driving up the PPI this time, they mainly stem from the pull of dual internal and external factors. Externally, the rise in international commodity prices, particularly the price rebound of Brent crude oil and non-ferrous metals, has significantly increased the purchasing costs of upstream raw materials. Internally, according to TrendForce observations, benefiting from the guidance of domestic macroeconomic policies and the effectiveness of capacity governance, prices in specific emerging industries such as lithium batteries and solar equipment took the lead in stopping their decline and rebounding, driving the recovery of overall industrial producer prices.

Regarding this surge in PPI, institutional analysis generally points to "cost-push" as the core engine. Comments from institutions such as Tekedia and Caixin point out that the recent escalation of geopolitical tensions has led to a sharp spike in international oil prices within a short period. This "imported inflation" has become the main driver pushing China's PPI into positive territory. This indicates that the current price warming comes more from external shocks upstream in the supply chain rather than a comprehensive pull from domestic real demand. For some mid-to-downstream processing enterprises, they may even face the risk of margin squeeze.

Looking ahead, in the short term (1-2 months), as global raw material prices remain at high levels, coupled with the short-term restocking demand driven by the resumption of work and production after the Lunar New Year, the PPI is expected to remain stable in positive territory. However, in the medium term (3-6 months), the market still faces a double-edged sword test. If geopolitical conflicts fail to cool down, continuously high oil prices can support PPI figures, but high costs may trigger the risk of stagflation. Conversely, if China's domestic terminal consumption fails to provide substantial support, the rebound in industrial product prices will lack subsequent momentum. How policies can strike a balance between stabilizing prices and stimulating domestic demand will be the defensive focus of the next stage.

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