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Analysis

Canary down: China’s PMI flashes red as tariff truce rings hollow

The latest nosedive in China’s private manufacturing gauge isn’t a black swan—it’s a canary in the trade war coal mine, feathers scorched by tariffs and global uncertainty. The Caixin Manufacturing PMI’s plunge to 48.3 isn’t just a weak print—it’s a body blow to the backbone of China’s economy: small and mid-sized exporters now caught in a brutal vice grip between faltering global demand and a Washington-led tariff regime that’s more carrot-and-stick diplomacy than ceasefire.

Yes, there’s a 90-day tariff truce in place—but markets weren’t pricing in miracles, and this report confirms why. This isn’t a cyclical wobble. It’s structural rot. Beneath the ceremonial handshake between Trump and Xi lies a battlefield strewn with SME carcasses, trimming payrolls and slashing orders as sentiment buckles. The divergence from the official PMI tells you everything—state-backed giants with diversified exposure are weathering the storm. But the Caixin sample? That’s the mom-and-pop exporters grinding gears in Guangdong, where one order cancellation is the difference between survival and shuttered factory gates.

And let’s not dismiss this as statistical noise or quirks in seasonal adjustments. This kind of surprise, off every estimate in the street’s range, is economic shrapnel. China’s data has always had layers, but this PMI collapse is the layer that exposes the soft underbelly: a two-speed economy where the real-world players are bleeding out while officialdom scripts a more palatable version for global consumption.

The setup heading into the second half of 2025 is dangerous. Weak domestic demand remains a chronic anchor. The export lifeline is fraying. And the vaunted “Made in China 2035” revival? It’s still stuck in committee. As markets digest this, the broader implication is simple: don’t mistake détente for direction. The tariff pause isn’t stimulus—it’s just a lull in a longer war of attrition.

This isn’t just a PMI miss. It’s the echo of a broken growth model—and no amount of truce talk can patch over that.

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