|

Chinese Yuan: PMIs allow patient stance for PBoC – Commerzbank

Commerzbank’s Dr. Henry Hao argues that resilient manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs suggest China’s economy is not weak enough to warrant immediate broad-based easing, even as domestic demand indicators stay soft. Policymakers are expected to maintain targeted rather than aggressive stimulus while export-led growth holds up, with the July Politburo meeting seen as a key checkpoint for second-half fiscal and monetary decisions.

Headline resilience and cautious easing

"The official PMI readings for June 2026 reflect an economy walking a tightrope. A surge in high-tech exports has buffered the manufacturing sector, pushing it further into expansion territory. Yet, this external strength stands in stark contrast to cooling domestic market, creating a two-speed dynamic that complicates the near-term policy outlook."

"For policymakers, the latest data send a mixed signal. Resilient manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs suggest that the economy has not weakened enough to justify immediate broad-based easing. At the same time, softer domestic indicators, including retail sales and fixed-asset investment, point to persistent underlying demand weakness. "

"This combination could delay the deployment of stronger policy measures, as authorities may prefer to wait for clearer evidence that growth momentum is slipping more broadly."

"In our view, this points to a more patient policy stance in the near term. As long as export-led factory activity continues to support headline growth, policymakers may keep stimulus targeted rather than aggressive. "

"The July Politburo meeting will therefore be an important checkpoint, as it should provide a clearer signal on whether Beijing intends to step up fiscal or monetary support in the second half of the year."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD stays weak near 1.3250 on resurgent USD demand

GBP/USD stays weak near 1.3250 in European trading on Tuesday, reversing a part of the previous day's advance to a one-week high. The pair ditches a three-day winning streak, undermined by the USD/JPY upsurge-led broad US Dollar rebound. US jobs data in next in focus.

EUR/USD keeps the red near 1.1400 on firmer US Dollar

EUR/USD remains in the red near 1.1400 in early Europe on Tuesday, snapping a three-day winning streak amid a firmer US Dollar. The pair trades with caution ahead of Germany's preliminary inflation readings and the US JOLTS Job Openings Survey.

Gold recovers early lost ground to YTD low; Fed hike bets and firmer USD to cap upside

Gold builds on its intraday recovery from the lowest level since November 2025, touched earlier this Tuesday, and climbs to the top end of its daily range heading into the European session. Any meaningful appreciation still seems elusive in the wake of a broadly firmer US Dollar. Against the backdrop of renewed Mideast tensions, mixed signals on US-Iran talks assist the USD to stall its recent pullback from the highest level since May 2025.

Ripple defends critical support, Stellar extends recovery

Ripple (XRP) trades around the key $1.00 psychological level, consolidating as the token awaits its next directional catalyst. Stellar (XLM) extends its recovery above $0.178 after posting modest gains at the start of this week.

Just like Fed, is BoJ’s independence under threat?

When talking about central bank independence, most of the focus has been on Donald Trump’s pressure on the Federal Reserve. But a similar story, a quieter one for now, seems to be happening on the other side of the Pacific: Japan’s government may be testing the Bank of Japan’s independence.

Kevin Warsh isn't expected to say much in Sintra: That's exactly why markets will listen

Financial markets could find an important catalyst in the enchanting, fairytale-like landscape of Sintra this week. The ECB Forum will, as it does every year, gather the crème de la crème of central banks. The new boss at the Fed, who has clearly said that the Fed should stop explaining everything, will need to talk – and traders should listen.