Moody's affirms China’s A1 rating, upgrades outlook to stable

Moody’s Ratings affirmed China’s A1 sovereign credit rating on Monday and upgraded the outlook to stable. The Ministry of Finance welcomed the decision, stating it recognizes China’s macroeconomic resilience and fiscal strength amid external shocks. Economists attribute this to technological innovation and robust policy support.

The Ministry of Finance said the rating affirmation reflects Moody’s recognition of the strong resilience of China’s macroeconomy and fiscal strength amid external shocks, as well as new drivers and progress in high-quality development.

Against a backdrop of rapidly shifting global trade conditions and geopolitical risks, the Chinese government has rolled out macroeconomic measures and strengthened policy coordination. This has allowed the economy to withstand pressures and move toward advanced development, demonstrating advantages of its vast domestic market, well-developed supply chains, and strong export competitiveness—key pillars of its sovereign credit profile, the ministry noted.

Looking ahead, the ministry said China will deepen reforms, enhance fiscal sustainability, and accelerate the development of new quality productive forces to solidify its economic foundation and better cope with external uncertainties.

Moody’s cited China’s vast and diversified economy, along with its strong innovation capacity evident in rising competitiveness across higher value-added sectors. Jeremy Zook, lead analyst for China at Fitch Ratings, highlighted China’s dominant position in global manufacturing and supply chains, plus major expansions in renewable energy and electric vehicle sectors.

Over the past five years, China’s GDP has expanded by more than 35 trillion yuan ($5.1 trillion), achieving an average annual growth rate of 5.4 percent during the 14th Five-Year Plan period and contributing around 30 percent of global economic growth, according to the Ministry of Finance. Xiong Yi, chief economist for China at Deutsche Bank, noted that first-quarter GDP growth of 5 percent exceeded market expectations, driven mainly by domestic investment and exports, with the property sector showing early signs of stabilization.

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Illustration of China's record Q1 foreign trade growth, depicting a busy port with ships, cranes, and surging trade graphs.
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China's Q1 foreign trade up 15%, fastest in five years

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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.

Moody’s Ratings has changed South Africa’s credit outlook to positive from stable while keeping its Ba2 rating unchanged. The move reflects progress on fiscal management and reforms.

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Moody’s Ratings cut Mexico’s sovereign credit rating to Baa3 from Baa2 and shifted the outlook to stable. The move reflects ongoing fiscal weakening and subdued economic growth forecasts.

Moody’s Ratings kept Petróleos Mexicanos credit rating at B1 with a stable outlook. The move came despite Mexico’s sovereign rating cut.

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China’s top Communist Party journal, Qiushi, has reaffirmed the push to rebalance trade, stating that a worsening global environment of rising protectionism and geopolitical tensions adds urgency to shifting from an “unsustainable” export-driven growth model. The commentary notes profound changes in conditions shaping China’s trade balance, with deep-seated weaknesses in the foreign trade sector remaining pronounced.

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