Investing.com — China’s disinflationary trend worsened in November, data showed over the weekend, with consumer prices falling at their fastest pace in three years, while producer prices remained in contraction for a fourteenth consecutive month.
The readings spurred increased concerns over the Chinese economy, which saw China’s blue chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index sink over 1% to a near five-year low. The Shanghai Composite and Hong Kong's Hang Seng index lost 1% and 2%, respectively, on weakness in mainland stocks.
The yuan shed 0.3% despite a stronger daily midpoint fix.
China’s consumer price index fell 0.5% month-on-month in November, data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed. The reading was weaker than expectations for a drop of 0.1%, and also worsened from a 0.1% contraction seen in October.
Year-on-year, CPI inflation fell 0.5%, missing expectations for a drop of 0.1% and deepening from a 0.2% drop in the prior month. The reading was also at its weakest since September 2020.
The data showed little pick-up in consumer spending, as business activity remained weak and as growing economic risks saw consumers cut back further on discretionary spending.
The decline also came despite continued liquidity injections by the government, and signaled that Beijing needed to do more to shore up economic activity.
Weak business activity saw producer price index inflation sink 3% year-on-year in November, worse than expectations for a drop of 2.8% and the prior month’s drop of 2.6%. PPI inflation also remained in contraction for a fourteenth consecutive month.
Chinese businesses faced continued pressure from weak overseas demand, with a mild pick-up in local orders doing little to offset an overall decline.
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