Stock Markets May 18, 2026 07:44 AM

Barclays: April Data Points to Sharp Slowdown in China’s Retail, Industry and Investment

Retail sales, industrial output and fixed-asset investment all underperform expectations, with property and household lending showing pronounced weakness

By Marcus Reed
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Barclays' analysis of China's April indicators shows a pronounced deceleration across key demand and production measures. Retail sales grew only 0.2% year-over-year, industrial production eased to 4.1% and fixed-asset investment fell 1.6%, all missing consensus forecasts. Property investment and household borrowing displayed notable declines, while exports remained strong through the first four months.

Barclays: April Data Points to Sharp Slowdown in China’s Retail, Industry and Investment
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Key Points

  • Retail sales rose only 0.2% year-over-year in April, missing the 2.0% consensus and below the first-quarter average of 2.4%.
  • Fixed-asset investment fell 1.6% year-over-year, with infrastructure and manufacturing investment each down about 4% and property investment down roughly 20%, weighing on overall investment demand.
  • Industrial production slowed to 4.1% year-over-year - a 33-month low - despite exports growing 15% year-over-year from January through April, signaling weakening domestic demand.

China's economic momentum weakened markedly in April, according to Barclays' read of the latest activity indicators, with retail spending, manufacturing output and investment levels all disappointing at the outset of the second quarter.

Retail activity expanded just 0.2% year-over-year in April on Barclays' analysis, falling short of the Bloomberg consensus projection of 2.0%. That reading sits well below the first-quarter average of 2.4% and is among the weakest monthly prints since late 2022.

Fixed-asset investment contracted 1.6% year-over-year, contrary to the consensus expectation for a 1.7% increase. Within the investment components, infrastructure and manufacturing each recorded contractions of roughly 4%, while property investment plunged by about 20%.

Industrial production growth decelerated to 4.1% year-over-year in April, down from a 6.1% pace in the first quarter and below the consensus estimate of 6.0%. Barclays notes this marks a 33-month low for the industrial output gauge. The slowdown in production occurred despite robust export performance - exports rose 15% year-over-year from January through April - implying that weaker domestic demand has weighed on manufacturing activity.

Property sector and housing demand showed further deterioration. New home sales contracted 9.5% year-over-year in April, a larger decline than the 7.4% drop registered in the prior period. Property investment's near-20% fall contributed materially to the overall drop in fixed-asset investment.

Household borrowing also reflected caution. Households were net repayers of CNY787 billion in April, the largest net repayment on record, which produced the first bank loan contraction since July 2025.

Barclays attributes the broad-based slowdown to several forces: the fading of front-loaded stimulus measures, a weakening credit impulse and structural constraints linked to uneven growth patterns. The bank also flagged oil shocks as an additional source of pressure on activity.


Analysts and market participants will monitor upcoming releases for signs of stabilization, but April's data point to a notable softening across consumption, investment and industrial output.

Risks

  • Weakening domestic demand could further depress industrial output and manufacturing-related sectors if the trend persists - impacting producers and logistics tied to internal consumption.
  • Sharp declines in property investment and new home sales increase downside risks for construction, real estate services and credit exposure in the housing sector.
  • Record household net repayments and the first bank loan contraction since July 2025 point to tightening credit impulse, which could constrain consumer spending and investment across sectors.

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