The headlines in bold are what I would deem as notable but the overall message is one that we’ve seen repeated for quite a while now. The biggest challenge for China since the property market crash has been trying to revive domestic demand conditions. And until today, that remains one of the government’s biggest hurdles in trying to get the local economy to prosper again.

The outline of needing to pursue more proactive fiscal policy and “moderately loose” monetary policy reaffirms the overall dual policy direction that Beijing has been sticking to in recent years. So, there’s no changes there as we look to 2026.

Besides that, China is also making it clear that they also focused on market developments – especially when it comes to the yuan currency and the dollar. We’ve already seen a glimpse of that earlier in the day here but they might have to do more if the greenback continues to weaken this year.

As a reminder, a weaker Chinese yuan was China’s first line of buffer against Trump and his tariffs. As such, an even weaker dollar pretty much neutralises the playing field. A struggling dollar in that respect maximises the pain from tariffs and hurts competition from other countries more.

This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.

 
BUILT ON A CARBON NEUTRAL BLOCKCHAIN NETWORK

© MegaHoot, LLC. All Rights Reserved  |  media at hootdex.com  Privacy Policy  |  Risk Disclosure  |  Legal Disclaimer  |  TOS  | Neutrality  |  AML/KYC

error: Content is protected !!