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International

Chinese Industrial Capacity Utilization Slides in Q1

China's industrial capacity utilization rate stood at 73.6% in the first quarter, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics released Thursday.The indicator fell 1.3 percentage points from the fourth quarter, the NBS said.Capacity utilization in the mining sector was 72.1%, while that of the manufacturing sector reached 73.9%, and that of the utilities sector was 71.9%, according to the bureau.Capacity utilization is the ratio of actual output to production capacity, the NBS said.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

New Home Prices in China's Top-Tier Cities See Monthly Rise in March

Prices of new residential properties in China's top-tier cities increased month on month by 0.2% in March, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics released Thursday.The data for March reversed the flat performance seen in the previous month, the NBS said.Across second- and third-tier cities, sales of commercial residential properties fell 0.2% and 0.3%, respectively.On a yearly basis, new home prices in first-tier cities slid 2.2%, while those in second-level cities edged down 3.3%,Used home prices in first-tier saw a 0.4% increase, reversing from a 0.1% decline, while those in second- and third-tier cities slipped 0.2% and 0.4%, respectively.On a yearly basis, prices plunged 7.4%

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
International

China's Economy Expands 5% in Q1

China's gross domestic product in the first quarter rose 5%, according to Thursday data from the National Bureau of Statistics.The official data beat the 4.8% growth forecasted by Reuters-surveyed analysts.The data was attributed to an acceleration in the growth of the country's production and supply and improving market demand, as well as a rebound in market prices and stable employment.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
International

China Logs 1.7% Rise in Q1 Fixed Asset Investment

China's fixed asset investment rose 1.7% year over year to 10.3 trillion yuan in the first three months of the year.Private fixed asset investment decreased 2.2%, according to a Thursday news release by the National Bureau of Statistics.Industrial investment climbed 5.8%, while infrastructure investment increased 8.9%.On a monthly basis, fixed asset investment, excluding rural households, increased 0.5% in March.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
International

China's Urban Unemployment Unchanged at 5.4% in Q1

China's urban unemployment rate was unchanged year over year at 5.3% in the first quarter, according to data from China's National Bureau of Statistics.In March, urban unemployment rate was 5.4%. The unemployment rate was 5.4% for domestic laborers and 5.3% for migrant workers.The national average weekly working hours for employees was 48.1 hours.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
International

Middle East Outlook Elevates Asian Stock Markets

Asian stock markets tracked higher Wednesday amid reports that Iran and the US may again meet to negotiate a possible settlement to Middle East hostilities.Hong Kong and Tokyo finished in the green, as did most other regional exchanges. Exchanges in Bangkok remained closed on holiday.In Japan, the Nikkei 225 opened higher and held ground, finishing up 0.4% as the risk-on mood among traders was sustained on the Persian Gulf outlook.The benchmark Nikkei 225 rose 256.85 to 58,134.24, as gaining issues outnumbered losers 130 to 91.Leading the upside was consultancy BayCurrent, up 14% after reporting earnings, while memory-device maker Kioxia declined 7.4%.In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index opened higher and closed in the green, up 0.3% on hopes that oil prices may ebb in coming months, if conflicts in the Persian Gulf are resolved.The broad gauge Hang Seng rose 75 to 25,947.32, as gaining issues outnumbered losers 48 to 40. The Hang Seng TECH Index gained 1.2% on the day, while the Mainland Properties Index was steady.Leading the upside was Laopu Gold, rising 6.8%, while New Oriental Education and Technology declined 5.9%.On the mainland, the Shanghai Composite was almost flat, closing at 4,027.21.On the other regional exchanges, the S. Korean KOSPI rose 2.1%; the Taiwan TWSE inclined 1.2%; the Australian ASX 200 declined 0.1%, and the Singapore Straits Times Index rose 0.3%. In late trading in Mumbai, the Sensex was up 1.6%The MSCI All Country Asia Pacific Index rose 0.9% on the day.

Hang SengNikkei 225Shanghai Composite
Asia

IMF Lowers 2026 Growth Outlook for Most Asian Economies Amid Middle East War

The International Monetary Fund has lowered its growth estimates for most Asian economies for 2026, according to a recent release.The organization revised down its growth outlook for emerging Asian economies to 4.9% from a previous prospect of 5% in January, which was before the start of the conflict in the Middle East.Growth for the group will continue to decline to 4.8% in 2027, the IMF said.The organization projects China's economy growing 4.4% this year and 4% next year, while India will post growth of 6.5% for the next two years.Cumulative growth among Southeast Asia's five biggest economies, including Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand, will fall to 3.7% in 2026 from 4.9%, although this will recover to 4.7% next year, the organization said.Individually, Vietnam will post the strongest growth of 7.1%, although this is still lower than the 8% growth last year.The rest of the economies in the group will also see lower growth, with Indonesia at 5%, Malaysia at 4.7%, the Philippines at 4.1%, and Thailand at 1.5%.Among advanced economies in Asia-Pacific, Korea's growth will rise to 1.9% from 1% last year, while that of Australia will remain flat at 2%.Japan's growth will slow down to 0.7% in 2026 and 0.6% in 2027 from 1.2% last year, according to the IMF.Taiwan will see lower expansion of 5.2% from 8.7% in 2025, while Singapore's growth will come to 3.5%, down from 5% last year.Hong Kong will also observe lower growth of 2.4%, compared to 3.5% in 2025.The IMF forecasts global economic growth to weaken to 3.1% this year from 3.4% last year, accounting for the impacts of the continued conflict in the Middle East.

ASX 200^BSE^DSE^HNX^HOSEHang Seng^JKSEFTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI^KOSDAQKOSPINikkei 225Nifty 50^PSEI^SETShanghai Composite^STI^SZSETaiwan Weighted^YSX
Asia

Market Chatter: China Increasingly Looks to Southeast Asia for Chip Tool Imports Amid Tighter US Controls

The share of Malaysia and Singapore in China's chipmaking equipment imports surged in 2025, exceeding those from the US, Nikkei Asia reported Wednesday.Imports from the Southeast Asian nations hit an all-time high, with those from Singapore rising more than 17% year over year to $5.7 billion and those from Malaysia more than doubling to $3.4 billion, according to the report.The increase is driven by the expansion of US chip equipment makers' manufacturing capacity in Southeast Asia to cater to non-US clients, the report cited Needham & Co. semiconductor analyst Charles Shi as saying.US imports dropped more than 34% to about $2 billion, setting an eight-year low, the report cited Chinese customs data as saying.Increased tariffs and export controls targeting China's chipmaking industry under President Donald Trump have contributed to the slowdown, according to the report.However, China continues to be a key revenue source for major US chip equipment producers last year, the report said.The Netherlands and Japan are still China's main foreign sources of key semiconductor manufacturing machines by shipment origin, Nikkei Asia said.Meanwhile, China's domestic chipmaking equipment manufacturing industry is seeing material expansion amid government efforts promoting locally produced tools, the report said.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCINikkei 225Shanghai Composite^STI^SZSE
Asia

Market Chatter: China to Hold Meeting on Ultra-Long Special Treasury Bond Plan

The Chinese Finance Ministry will meet with government bond underwriters on Thursday regarding the issuance of ultra-long special treasury bonds in 2026, the report said."I expect ​special treasury bonds will be mentioned - it's about time and ⁠will spare everyone the daily guessing," Reuters quoted one of the sources as saying.Markets are speculating that the government will allocate a smaller portion for 30-year special treasury bonds, according to the newswire.The foreseen allocation has driven yields on the 30-year bonds lower to 2.27%, according to Reuters.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

China to Introduce New Credit Support Measures for Businesses

China will introduce new measures to provide credit support for commercial development, Xinhua News Agency reported Tuesday.The measures issued by the Commerce Ministry and the Export-Import Bank of China will help promote trade development, boost two-way investment, and improve cooperation with members of China's Belt and Road Initiative, the report said.China will use credit tools to explore new markets and improve services, while the country will also help attract foreign capital, among other measures, the report said.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

NEVs Dominate Shanghai Auto Exports in Q1

More than 400,000 new energy vehicles were shipped through Shanghai ports in the first quarter, nearly 70% of total auto exports, according to data from Shanghai Customs.Waigaoqiao port shipped 386,000 vehicles, up 16% year on year, with NEVs comprising 69%.Nangang wharf logged a 111% jump to 207,000 units, with NEV exports surging 176%.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

Chinese Auto Industry Veteran Gets 13-Year Jail Term for Bribery

A court in Henan, China, sentenced ​former China South Industries Group Corp. deputy general manager Liu Weidong to 13 years in prison for bribery, Xinhua News Agency reported Tuesday.The court also fined Liu 4 million yuan, the report said.Liu, an auto industry veteran, took more than 41.4 million yuan in bribes from 1999 to 2025 while being deputy general manager at Dongfeng Motor (HKG:0489) and China Changan Automobile, according to the report.

Shanghai Composite^SZSEHKG:0489
Asia

Chinese Stocks End Mixed Amid Ongoing Middle East Conflict

Chinese equities were muted as investors are still cautious over the ongoing Middle East conflict and hopes of the U.S. and Iran potentially resuming negotiations.The Shanghai Composite Index moderately rose to finish Wednesday at 4,027.21. The Shenzhen Component Index, however, lost 1%, or 141.50 points, to 14,498.46.Pressure is racking among global trade partners amid the U.S. blockage of the Strait of Hormuz, with the US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping set to meet in the coming weeks.There are still expectations that the U.S. will conduct a second round of discussions with Tehran despite the talks in Pakistan falling apart.In corporate news, Guangdong Dowstone Technology (SHE:300409) dropped 6% despite its 2025 attributable profit surging 223% year on year to 506.8 million yuan and its first-quarter attributable profit soaring 146% from a year earlier to 107.7 million yuan.FSPG Hi-Tech (SHE:000973) dipped 4% after forecasting that its first-quarter attributable profit will surge 1,993% to 2,664% to between 530 million yuan and 700 million yuan.Ninestar (SHE:002180) jumped 6.3%, although it swung to a net loss attributable to shareholders of 718.2 million yuan, or 0.51 yuan per share, in 2025.

Shanghai Composite^SZSESHE:000973SHE:002180SHE:300409
Asia

Credit Losses for Asia-Pacific Banks to Rise by $180 Billion Under Prolonged Middle East War, S&P Says

Credit losses for Asia-Pacific banks could surge by about $180 billion over the next two years under a downward scenario of a prolonged war in the Middle East, S&P Global Ratings said in a Wednesday release.Total biennial credit losses could hit $910 billion over 2026 and 2027 under this scenario, compared with $730 billion under S&P's base case.The rise in credit losses to total loans would hit Vietnam, Indonesia, and India the most under this scenario, S&P said.Under S&P's base case, banks will feel a weaker impact from the war since direct exposures to the Middle East are low and indirect ones are manageable.In a downward scenario, banks will likely be hit by secondary effects on the household, corporate, and government sectors, credit analyst Gavin Gunning said.The impact will be felt more by banks with sizable exposures to susceptible corporate sectors such as airlines, energy, chemicals, and transportation.However, S&P expects bank buffers to be resilient at current rating levels under a downside case.Of more than 400 S&P-rated financial institutions in the region, 92% have ratings with a stable outlook, while only 2.9% are negative.

ASX 200Hang SengNikkei 225Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

China Releases Pricing Rules for Newly Market, Innovative Drugs

China released guidelines to optimize pricing for newly marketed and innovative medicines, Xinhua News Agency reported Tuesday.The General Office of the State Council's guidelines will help ensure patients have access to high-quality and reasonably priced medicines, the report said.China's guidelines for high-level innovative drugs should be priced according to their high research and development investment and high risk involved for a certain period, according to the state-owned news agency.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

Market Chatter: US Treasury Chief Slams China as Unreliable Global Partner Due to Oil Hoarding

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called China an "unreliable global partner" amidst the war in the Middle East, Reuters reported Tuesday, citing remarks made to reporters.Bessent said China has been stockpiling more oil than needed and limiting exports, similar to how the country hoarded medical supplies during the COVID-19 pandemic, the report said."China has been an unreliable global partner three times in the past five years; once during COVID, when ​they hoarded healthcare products, second on (rare earths)," the publication quoted Bessent as saying.China's reserve is equivalent to the entire stockpile held by the 32 members of the ​International Energy Agency (IEA), Reuters said.The International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and the IEA have asked countries to stop hoarding oil and imposing export controls, but stopped short of naming countries, the report said.China has been working actively to end the hostilities and would "continue playing a constructive role," Reuters said, citing Liu Pengyu, spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

Market Chatter: Yangtze Memory Technologies to Establish Two Additional Factories Amid US Crackdown on Exports to China

Yangtze Memory Technologies (YMTC) is looking to establish two more production facilities in addition to one slated for completion in 2026, Reuters reported Tuesday, citing people familiar with the plans.The three new factories will help the company produce 100,000 wafers each per month when fully operational, the report said, citing the sources.At present, the company's two fabs can produce a combined 200,000 wafers per month, the report said.YMTC is China's largest maker of NAND flash memory chips for data storage in smartphones and computers, according to Reuters.The additional production facilities come as China is looking to wean itself off foreign technologies, including semiconductors, Reuters reported.U.S. officials have been looking to limit exports of semiconductor manufacturing tools to China, according to the newswire.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

China Central Bank Performs 500 Billion Yuan of Reverse Repo Operation

The People's Bank of China on Wednesday conducted 500 billion yuan of seven-day reverse repurchase operations, according to a same-day notice.The operation used a fixed-rate, quantity-based bidding process, with an operating rate of 1.4%.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
International

IMF Trims 2026 GDP Growth Outlook for China to 4.4%

The International Monetary Fund reduced its economic outlook for China to 4.4% for this year from 4.5% in its January estimate as international markets continue to grapple with the impact of the Middle East conflict, according to a Tuesday press release.The new outlook is lower than Beijing's gross domestic product growth target of between 4.5% and 5% but higher than the agency's October 2025 projection.For 2027, the IMF predicts China's GDP growth will further slow down to 4%.The agency lowered the global economic growth forecast to 3.1% for the year and 3.2% in 2027, while global headline inflation is expected to moderately climb this year."A longer or broader conflict, worsening geopolitical fragmentation, a reassessment of expectations surrounding artificial‑intelligence‑driven productivity, or renewed trade tensions could significantly weaken growth and destabilize financial markets," the IMF said.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
US Markets

China's Balance of Trade Plunges in March Despite Import Surge

China's balance of trade saw a surplus of $51.13 billion in March, according to data from Customs released Tuesday.The figure was weaker compared with a $213.62 billion surplus in February and missed analsyts' estimates of $107.5 billion during the month, according to a report by Investing.com.In local currency terms, the balance of trade plunged 4.8% year over year, analysts from ING said in a note Tuesday.The plunge in local currency terms could also impact China's GDP data, due for release Thursday, ING said.Exports jumped 2.5% year over year to $321 billion during the month, Customs said. The growth rate missed a forecast of 8.3%, according to Investing.com. It is also slower compared with the 21.8% surge in the January-February period.Exports destined for the U.S. fell 14.6% year over year, but is expected to ease in the coming months, analysts from ING said."With the drag from the US expected to ease-assuming no new tariff shocks, which cannot be fully ruled out-external demand should remain an important driver of growth this year," ING said.Imports soared 27.8% year over year to $269.9 billion during the month, exceeding expectations, and up from a 19.8% rise seen in the January-February period, according to multiple media reports.The surge is attributable to higher technology product prices, which led to "stunning export growth" across the rest of Asia-Pacific, ING analysts said.Chinese semiconductor imports jumped 11% year on year year-to-date by volume and 45% year-to-date by value, according to the analysts.The figure has not taken into account the impact of the Iran war, as crude oil imports increased 8.9% year on year, year-to-date in volume terms but were down 4.7% year to date in value terms, ING said.Higher energy prices could accelerate imports further in the coming months, the bank said.The balance of trade for the quarter reached $264.3 billion.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE

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