Fresh numbers from Beijing reveal a sharper economic nosedive than analysts predicted, with factory output slumping, investments shrinking, and the property market dragging everything down. This latest batch of October data exposes cracks in China’s growth model that free-market economies like America’s have long avoided through innovation and consumer-driven demand.
Retail sales managed a meager 2.9% year-on-year bump in October, barely edging out forecasts but still sliding from September’s 3% pace. Industrial production fared even worse, growing just 4.9% compared to the previous month’s 6.5%—missing expectations for 5.5% amid factory shutdowns during the long holiday stretch.
The real gut punch came in fixed-asset investments, which include real estate and infrastructure. These contracted 1.7% over the first 10 months of the year, a steeper drop than the 0.5% decline through September and far beyond the anticipated 0.8% dip. This marks the first outright contraction since 2020, stretching back to records from 1992.
“The sharp drop in fixed-asset investment was largely dragged down by lackluster investment in the property sector and infrastructure,” said Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.
Urban unemployment ticked down slightly to 5.1% from 5.2%, offering a thin silver lining, while consumer prices rose 0.2% year-on-year—the strongest since January and the first positive print since June. Core inflation, stripping out food and energy, hit 1.2%, its best since February 2024.
Exports also tanked for the first time in nearly two years, hammered by weaker U.S. shipments just before a tariff deal between President Trump and Xi Jinping. Third-quarter GDP growth slowed to 4.8%, down from 5.2% in the second quarter and 5.4% in the first.
Zhang added that no more stimulus is likely this year, as the economy scrapes toward its 5% target. “The economy is on track to meet its 5% growth target,” he noted.
For American workers and businesses, China’s stumble opens doors. As Beijing grapples with state-heavy policies stifling recovery, U.S. manufacturers stand to gain from reshoring jobs and boosting domestic production. Strong American consumer spending and energy independence continue to fuel steady growth here, proving the edge of market freedom over central planning. Investors eyeing global shifts should watch how this weakness ripples into supply chains, potentially strengthening U.S. positions in tech, autos, and beyond.




They *only* grow by 5% and that’s an economic catastrophe? The USA would be lucky to have 5% GDP growth. What kind of ridiculous spin is this?
Tariffs not high enough and no national industry strategy in 🇺🇸