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China's Q2 2026 CPI YoY Rate Rises to 1.2%, Beating Expectations, Energy and Travel Demand Drive Inflation Recovery

2026-05-11

【1. Core Overview】 According to DataTrack data, China's Consumer Price Index (CPI) YoY rate for 2026-04-01 (Q2 2026) rebounded to 1.2%, an increase of 0.2 percentage points from the previously observed value of 1.0% on 2026-03-01 (Q1 2026). This data not only ended the downward trend of the previous value but also outperformed the general market expectation range of 0.8% to 0.9%. Although overall inflation pressure is gradually emerging, it remains within the central bank's mild target range, indicating that after experiencing the previous shadow of deflation, China's price levels are gradually bottoming out and recovering.

【2. Key Details】 Breaking down the details, the two main forces pushing up the CPI in this period were "energy" and "services" prices. Influenced by fluctuations in international crude oil prices, both domestic energy and gasoline prices showed significant growth; meanwhile, with the release of travel demand during the spring and consecutive holidays, tourism and transportation service prices also climbed significantly. Relatively speaking, as food prices entered an off-peak consumption season after the Spring Festival, coupled with warming weather making the supply of agricultural products such as fresh vegetables abundant, the YoY rate turned to negative growth, becoming the main factor dragging down the overall CPI.

【3. In-depth Attribution】 Regarding the performance of this data, China's National Bureau of Statistics and market institutions mostly point to the dual superposition of "imported inflation" and "holiday effects." Institutions such as Nomura Securities pointed out that turmoil in the Middle East has caused global crude oil and commodity prices to soar. This inflationary force not only pushed up the Producer Price Index (PPI) but also transmitted directly to the transportation and non-food items of the CPI. In addition, analysts also emphasized that although the reflationary force on the supply side is welcomed by the Beijing authorities, it is not entirely driven by strong domestic demand, and attention must be paid to its crowding-out effect on corporate profits and residents' consumer purchasing power.

【4. Outlook and Risks】 Looking ahead to the short term (1-2 months), benefiting from the high-level support of international energy prices and the consumption catalyst of consecutive holidays, it is expected that China's CPI will maintain a mild upward trend, and the risk of deflation will be further lifted in the short term. However, looking at the medium term (3-6 months), as real estate market adjustments and employment environment pressures remain, the recovery of core domestic demand still appears fragile. If the pressure of imported inflation continues to expand, it may not only compress manufacturing profits but also test the People's Bank of China's (PBoC) policy balance between stabilizing prices and maintaining monetary easing to stimulate economic growth.

【5. Web Search Reference Sources】

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