China's consumption and investment weaken in November

China's retail sales grew by just 1.3 percent in November, missing forecasts and slowing for the sixth straight month. Investment from January to November fell 2.6 percent as the property slump persisted. Officials recognize ongoing challenges and urge more proactive macroeconomic policies.

China faces mounting pressure to ramp up stimulus as new data shows its growth engines sputtering, with retail sales growth slowing for six straight months and investment showing renewed signs of strain in November despite recent policy support.

The deceleration in consumption growth and the deepening property slump underscore the challenges Beijing faces in revitalising the economy heading into 2026. Retail sales, a key gauge of consumer spending, grew in November by just 1.3 per cent, year on year, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Monday.

The figure fell short of the 2.92 per cent forecast from financial data provider Wind and marked a drop from October’s 2.9 per cent increase.

Fu Linghui, a spokesman for the bureau, said China’s economy remained stable in November, sustaining the momentum of steady progress. “However, we should be aware that the economy still faces multiple challenges of external instability and uncertainty as well as insufficient effective domestic demand.”

The official said China must adopt more proactive and effective macro policies, and continue to expand domestic demand, improve supply, and optimise the allocation of both new and existing resources.

The persistent property downturn further weighed on overall investment, with fixed-asset investment falling 2.6 per cent from January to November.

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