China’s August CPI figure reflected a steeper 0.4% year-on-year decline in price levels versus the projected 0.2% dip while the PPI report came in line with expectations of a 2.9% slump.
The core inflation’s uptick to 0.9% provides some encouragement, potentially reflecting the impact of demand stimulus measures, though it remains well below China’s annual inflation target of around 2% for 2025.
Key Takeaways from China’s CPI and PPI reports
- CPI fell 0.4% YoY in August, worse than the -0.2% consensus estimate
- Core CPI rose 0.9% from a year earlier, reaching its highest level since February 2024
- Producer prices dropped 2.9% YoY, in line with expectations but remaining in deflationary territory for the third consecutive year
- Food prices deepened decline to -4.3% in August from -2.7% in July
- Household appliances and clothing showed notable price gains of 4.6% and 1.9% respectively
Link to official Chinese National Bureau of Statistics Inflation Reports (August 2025)
Chinese authorities attributed the headline CPI decline largely to elevated base effects from the previous year and lower food prices. However, analysts note that deflation in consumer durables has deepened to 3.7% from 3.5% in July, indicating more severe deflationary pressures than seen during the 2008 financial crisis.
In effect, these highlight underlying weakness in domestic demand despite earlier stimulus, underscoring the challenges facing the world’s second-largest economy and raising expectations for additional policy support from Beijing.
Several local governments have already paused consumer trade-in programs due to rapid fund depletion, highlighting the challenges in stimulating domestic consumption.
Market Reactions
Australian Dollar vs. Major Currencies: 5-min
Overlay of AUD vs. Major Currencies Chart by TradingView
The Aussie, which was already cruising in a shallow bullish range earlier in the Asian session, accelerated its climb during the release of weaker than expected Chinese CPI data, as the numbers likely supported calls for additional stimulus measures to ward off deflation.
AUD gained sharply against major currencies, with AUD/CAD rising 0.35%, AUD/JPY up 0.33%, and AUD/USD advancing 0.32% a few hours after the report was printed.