Key Takeaways: China's factory-gate prices extended gains in May as AI infrastructure spending drove demand for copper, tin and semiconductors.
Key Takeaways: China's factory-gate prices extended gains in May as AI infrastructure spending drove demand for copper, tin and semiconductors.

China's producer price index rose 0.5% in May from the prior month, the National Bureau of Statistics said Wednesday, extending a five-month run of gains even as the pace moderated from April's 1.7% jump. Non-ferrous metals and computer-related industries led the advance as artificial intelligence investment and industrial equipment upgrades reshaped China's industrial pricing dynamics.
"The PPI data shows AI and computing power demand creating persistent price pressures in specific upstream segments, rather than a broad-based inflation impulse," said Zhang Ming, chief economist at China International Capital Corp. "This is concentrated in sectors tied to technology investment cycles and electrification."
Non-ferrous metal smelting prices rose 1.1% month-on-month, with tin smelting surging 4.8% and copper smelting climbing 3.1% — moves tied directly to data center buildout and renewable energy infrastructure. Computer and communication equipment manufacturing prices increased 0.6%, driven by a 2.9% jump in integrated circuit packaging testing and a 1.9% gain in external storage devices. Electrical machinery prices rose 0.5%, with fiber optic manufacturing up 8% and wire and cable manufacturing up 1.2%. Ferrous metal smelting, supported by equipment renewal in manufacturing, rose 1.2%.
The data highlights a widening divergence between China's technology-driven industrial expansion and weak consumer demand. Industrial enterprise profits rose 18.2% in the first four months from a year earlier, accelerating from 15.5% in the January-March period. The electronics industry posted a 107.7% profit surge that contributed 43.8% of total industrial profit growth, while raw material manufacturing profits jumped 88.1% on higher oil and copper prices. Yet the consumer goods PMI fell to 49.7% in May from 50.7%, pointing to tepid domestic demand. The raw material purchase price index at 60.5% remains well above the ex-factory price index at 51.9%, indicating manufacturers are absorbing cost increases rather than passing them through — compressing margins for midstream and downstream producers.
The PPI trajectory will influence People's Bank of China policy decisions. The 1-year medium-term lending facility rate stands at 2.5% after a 25-basis-point cut in September 2025, and persistent upstream price pressures limit the scope for further easing. The PBoC's next rate decision is scheduled for June 15, with markets pricing a high probability of no change given mixed signals from factory-gate prices and weak consumer demand. The central bank has maintained accommodative liquidity through open market operations, injecting 18.7 trillion yuan via reverse repos in May while achieving a net withdrawal of 390.2 billion yuan across all tools.
The manufacturing PMI slipped to 50.0% in May from 50.3%, hovering at the expansion-contraction boundary. High-tech manufacturing held at 52.9% and equipment manufacturing at 52.1%, while high-energy-consuming industries fell to 47.1% and consumer goods to 49.7%, reflecting the structural divergence. The construction PMI edged up to 48.8% from 48.0% but remained in contraction territory for a second month, suggesting the property sector drag persists despite policy support. The service sector showed relative strength, with the business activity index rising to 50.3% from 49.4%, supported by holiday-related consumption.
For global investors, the data suggests China's reflation story is concentrated in AI-linked sectors rather than broad-based. Copper prices have gained support from Chinese smelter demand, while the offshore yuan has traded near 6.77 per dollar as markets weigh the implications of sticky upstream prices against weak consumption. The divergence between producer and consumer prices will be a key theme for the second half of 2026, with implications for corporate earnings and sector allocation across Chinese equities. Mining sector profits rose 26% year-on-year in the first four months, while downstream consumer goods manufacturing remained under pressure.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.