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China's End-Q1 CPI Growth Slows to 1.0% YoY as Post-Holiday Effect Fades, But PPI Unexpectedly Turns Positive

2026-04-10

  1. Core Overview: China's inflation data experienced an expected cooling after the high point of the Spring Festival holiday. The latest DataTrack data shows that China's CPI annual growth rate for March 2026 (Q1) was 1.0%, retreating compared to 1.3% in February, but still remaining in positive growth territory for consecutive months, indicating that the haze of deflation has initially dissipated. This inflation cooling mainly stemmed from weakening post-holiday seasonal consumer demand, causing the overall price to fall back slightly faster than some market expectations.

  2. Key Details: In terms of detailed performance, according to official data cited by The Straits Times, the core CPI, excluding food and energy prices, slipped to 1.1% in March (previous value was 1.8%), indicating that domestic demand momentum remains mild. However, what attracted more market attention was the PPI (Producer Price Index) annual growth rate reaching 0.5%, which not only outperformed the market expectation of 0.4% but also reversed the long-term deflationary slump since the end of 2022 in one fell swoop.

  3. In-depth Attribution: Dong Lijuan, an analyst at the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) of China, pointed out that the recent two-way divergence in price changes has obvious structural factors. The CPI side was constrained by the fading boost of the Spring Festival holiday, leading to a narrowing of price increases in services such as catering and tourism; meanwhile, the strong positive turnaround in PPI was mainly attributed to soaring global commodity and crude oil prices triggered by recent geopolitical tensions, while the demand recovery and capacity optimization in some domestic industries also provided downside support.

  4. Outlook and Risks: In the short term (1-2 months), global oil price shocks will continue to drive up imported inflation pressure. The rise in transportation and manufacturing costs may gradually be transmitted to end consumption, providing certain support for the CPI, though attention must be paid to the risk of weak consumer confidence. In the medium term (3-6 months), since China's official inflation target for 2026 remains set at "around 2%", under the current pattern of weak core CPI, Bloomberg and major institutions generally believe that the People's Bank of China (PBoC) still has room for further interest rate cuts or the introduction of structural monetary tools, thereby stimulating the real economy and consolidating the confidence for domestic demand recovery.

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