China May Factory Activity Stalls
Analysis based on 22 articles · First reported May 30, 2026 · Last updated Jun 01, 2026
The slowdown in China's factory activity, as indicated by the flat PMI in May, suggests potential headwinds for global supply chains and commodity markets. While high-tech manufacturing shows resilience, overall weak domestic demand and rising energy costs due to the Middle East war could dampen investor confidence in China's economic growth trajectory, potentially affecting companies reliant on Chinese manufacturing or consumer spending.
China's manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) remained flat at 50.0 in May, according to the China — National Bureau of Statistics of China, indicating a slowdown in factory activity. This figure, which matches Reuters and Bloomberg News economist forecasts, is down from 50.3 in April and marks the lowest reading in three months. The slowdown is attributed to weak domestic demand, rising production costs, and a contraction in new export orders. The ongoing Middle East war involving Iran and Israel, which has led to the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, has caused global energy prices to surge, further squeezing manufacturers' profits. Despite these challenges, China's high-tech and equipment manufacturing sectors outperformed, and the non-manufacturing PMI, including services and construction, saw an improvement. China's government has vowed to address the supply-demand mismatch and has set a less ambitious GDP growth target for 2026. A summit between Chinese leader Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump in Beijing in mid-May did not extend the trade truce but explored tariff cuts.
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