La inversión en activos fijos de China cae un 1,6 por ciento en los primeros cuatro meses

Datos oficiales mostraron que la inversión en activos fijos de China cayó un 1,6 por ciento interanual en los primeros cuatro meses de 2026, informó la Oficina Nacional de Estadísticas.

La Oficina Nacional de Estadísticas señaló en un comunicado el lunes que la inversión en activos fijos totalizó 14,13 billones de yuanes, o alrededor de 2,06 billones de dólares estadounidenses.

La inversión en infraestructura creció un 4,3 por ciento interanual, mientras que la inversión manufacturera aumentó un 1,2 por ciento.

Excluyendo el sector inmobiliario, la inversión en activos fijos aumentó un 1,3 por ciento. La inversión en desarrollo inmobiliario cayó un 13,7 por ciento durante el mismo período.

Artículos relacionados

Illustration of China's record Q1 foreign trade growth, depicting a busy port with ships, cranes, and surging trade graphs.
Imagen generada por IA

China's Q1 foreign trade up 15%, fastest in five years

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

China's foreign trade reached 11.84 trillion yuan ($1.63 trillion) in the first quarter of 2026, up 15% year on year, the fastest quarterly growth in nearly five years, officials from the General Administration of Customs announced on Tuesday. Exports totaled 6.85 trillion yuan, up 11.9%, while imports rose 19.6% to 4.99 trillion yuan. The figure marks the first time first-quarter trade has exceeded 11 trillion yuan.

China's economy posted a steady recovery in the first four months of 2026, with key indicators rebounding and new growth drivers gaining momentum.

Reportado por IA

Official data showed China's value-added industrial output rose 5.6 percent year on year in the first four months of 2026. Growth in April reached 4.1 percent from a year earlier.

China has set its 2026 economic growth target at 4.5 to 5 percent, striving for better results, as announced in a government work report submitted to the National People's Congress on March 6, 2026—confirming earlier January reports of this range.

Reportado por IA

Japan's largest companies raised capital spending in the final quarter of last year, signaling stronger corporate sentiment. The Finance Ministry reported a 4% rise in spending on goods excluding software compared to the previous quarter. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is pushing for more investment in strategic sectors.

Hong Kong's finance chief Paul Chan forecasts first-quarter GDP growth exceeding 4%, the strongest in nearly five years, driven by a 17% rise in visitors and 5.2% gain in retail and catering spending. The preliminary figure is due on Tuesday.

Reportado por IA

China's official manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) fell slightly to 50.3 in April from 50.4 the previous month, though it exceeded expectations. New export orders and imports expanded for the first time since early 2024, but softer domestic activity pushed the non-manufacturing PMI into contraction. Price pressures remained in expansionary territory, indicating ongoing reflation.

 

 

 

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar