China’s Industrial Output Jumps 5.8% in May
China’s value-added industrial output rose 5.8% year on year in May, highlighting manufacturing resilience and growth in the country’s industrial sector.
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China’s value-added industrial output rose 5.8% year on year in May, highlighting manufacturing resilience and growth in the country’s industrial sector.
The Chinese mainland’s State Council Information Office released May 2025 economic data, spotlighting industrial output, retail resilience and trading performance.
London’s first U.S.-China trade talks underscore dialogue’s role in a volatile global economy.
First institutionalized China-U.S. trade talks in London open a new channel for equal, mutually beneficial cooperation.
US stocks rose as optimism over US–Chinese mainland trade talks boosted markets, led by energy, tech gains and Tesla’s 5.7% surge.
April saw the U.S. trade deficit narrow 55.5% to $61.6B as imports plunged 16.3%, hinting at a boost to GDP amid easing tariff front-loading.
Institutional investors are scaling back U.S. holdings amid trade policy uncertainty and growing debt, boosting allocations to Europe and beyond as global portfolios rebalance.
The Fed’s Beige Book signals a dip in US economic activity amid rising tariff-driven uncertainty, sending ripple effects across global markets and reshaping business strategies.
Leading banks including Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley raise China’s 2025 GDP growth forecasts amid pro-growth policies and eased trade tensions.
The U.S. Court of International Trade halted Trump’s proposed blanket tariffs, citing overreach. Here’s what it means for global trade and markets.