China Producer Prices Rise the Most in Near 4 Years
2026-05-11 01:32
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
China’s producer prices rose 2.8% yoy in April 2026, picking up from a 0.5% gain in the prior month and beating market forecasts of 1.5%.
It marked a second consecutive monthly gain and the fastest pace since July 2022, fueled by surging global commodity and energy prices amid supply disruptions from the war in Iran.
Beijing’s efforts to cut excess industrial capacity and curb intense price competition also helped lift factory-gate prices.
Production material costs quickened (3.8% vs 1.0% in March), led by steeper rises in mining (10.8% vs 2.0%), raw materials (7.1% vs 1.1%), and processing (1.5% vs 0.9%).
A fall in consumer goods prices eased (-1.0% vs -1.3%), despite continued drops in food (-1.9% vs -1.7%), clothing (-1.1% vs -1.1%), daily-use goods (-1.1% vs -1.4%), and durable goods (-0.3% vs -1.0%).
For the first four months of the year, producer prices rose 0.2%, reversing a 0.6% drop in January–March.
Monthly, producer prices gained 1.7%, the fastest since October 2021.