China’s retail sales decline for first time in over three years as economic cracks widen
China's economic slowdown signals potential global market disruptions, affecting commodity demand and heightening recession fears worldwide. The post China’s retail sales decline for first time in over three years as economic cracks widen appeared first on Crypto Briefing.

China’s retail sales decline for first time in over three years as economic cracks widen Fixed-asset investment posted its steepest drop in nearly 30 years while auto sales cratered 16%, painting a grim picture for the world's second-largest economy. Share Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 16, 2026 China’s retail sales fell 0.
6% year-on-year in May, the first decline since December 2022. For a country that has been desperately trying to pivot its economy toward domestic consumption, that number lands like a cold bucket of water. The data, released by China’s National Bureau of Statistics in mid-June, came in worse than forecasts that had called for a flat reading.
And retail sales weren’t the only ugly number: fixed-asset investment dropped 4.1% for the January-to-May period, marking one of the largest contractions in close to 30 years. The numbers behind the slowdown Look at the sector-level data and the picture gets worse.
Automobile sales plunged 16.1% year-on-year. Home appliances and audio-visual equipment fell 15.
6%. Building materials dropped 13.6%.
Advertisement Here’s the thing: cumulative retail sales for January through May still showed 1.4% growth year-on-year. That sounds almost reassuring until you realize it means the May collapse was sharp enough to drag what had been a mediocre but positive trend into outright contraction territory.
One month erased the narrative. Fixed-asset investment tells an even darker story If retail sales are about where the economy is today, fixed-asset investment is about where it’s headed tomorrow. A 4.
1% decline over five months is not a blip. It’s a signal that businesses and local governments are pulling back on the kinds of spending that drive future growth: factories, infrastructure, real estate development. To put that in perspective, China hadn’t seen a fixed-asset investment contraction of this magnitude in roughly three decades.
The last time the number looked this bad, China’s economy was a fraction of its current size and far less integrated into global supply chains. What this means for global markets and crypto China is the world’s second-largest economy. When its consumers stop spending and its businesses stop investing, the ripple effects don’t stay contained within its borders.
For traditional markets, the immediate concern is commodities. China is the world’s largest importer of everything from crude oil to copper to iron ore. Weaker domestic demand means weaker demand for raw materials, which puts pressure on commodity-exporting nations and the companies that supply them.
China’s strict domestic regulations on crypto trading and mining mean the impact won’t show up as direct selling pressure from Chinese participants. But international investors who monitor macro indicators as part of their allocation decisions will notice. A weakening China adds another reason for caution in an environment where traders are already parsing every data point for signs of global recession.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy. MACRO China’s retail sales decline for first time in over three years as economic cracks widen Fixed-asset investment posted its steepest drop in nearly 30 years while auto sales cratered 16%, painting a grim picture for the world's second-largest economy.
by Editorial Team Just now ago Share Add us on Google China’s retail sales fell 0.6% year-on-year in May, the first decline since December 2022. For a country that has been desperately trying to pivot its economy toward domestic consumption, that number lands like a cold bucket of water.
The data, released by China’s National Bureau of Statistics in mid-June, came in worse than forecasts that had called for a flat reading. And retail sales weren’t the only ugly number: fixed-asset investment dropped 4.1% for the January-to-May period, marking one of the largest contractions in close to 30 years.
The numbers behind the slowdown Look at the sector-level data and the picture gets worse. Automobile sales plunged 16.1% year-on-year.
Home appliances and audio-visual equipment fell 15.6%. Building materials dropped 13.
6%. Advertisement Here’s the thing: cumulative retail sales for January through May still showed 1.4% growth year-on-year.
That sounds almost reassuring until you realize it means the May collapse was sharp enough to drag what had been a mediocre but positive trend into outright contraction territory. One month erased the narrative. Fixed-asset investment tells an even darker story If retail sales are about where the economy is today, fixed-asset investment is about where it’s headed tomorrow.
A 4.1% decline over five months is not a blip. It’s a signal that businesses and local governments are pulling back on the kinds of spending that drive future growth: factories, infrastructure, real estate development.
To put that in perspective, China hadn’t seen a fixed-asset investment
Đọc thêm từ Tiền số / Crypto

Bybit and Plume Launch RWA Earn With Access to PIMCO Fixed Income Products
Plume has partnered with Bybit to bring institutional fixed income products to users through Bybit Earn. The new RWA Earn offering lets eligible users deploy idle stablecoins into tokenized products tied to PIMCO and CMB International strategies. Bybit Lets Users Deploy Stablecoi
Tokenized RWAs cross 900K holders, but here’s what you’re not seeing!
Private credit stress will tell us whether the yields mean something.

Uniswap’s UNI could surge 40x to $100 by 2030, Standard Chartered says
Uniswap’s UNI token has been projected to climb from about $2.70 to $100 by the end of 2030 as tokenized assets increasingly enter decentralized finance, according to a new forecast from Standard Chartered Bank. Standard Chartered Bank initiated coverage of…

Amazon’s data centers withdrew 2.5 billion gallons of water in 2025, and the AI boom is just getting started
Amazon's water usage highlights the urgent need for sustainable practices in tech, as AI growth strains resources and regulatory pressures mount. The post Amazon’s data centers withdrew 2.5 billion gallons of water in 2025, and the AI boom is just getting started appeared first o