China credit data shows sluggish demand, more household deleveraging amid weak investment
China's domestic economy is experiencing sluggish demand and weak investment, according to recent credit data from the People's Bank of China. In May, new bank loans totaled 520 billion yuan, a decrease from the 620 billion yuan recorded in the same period last year.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedChina's domestic economy is experiencing sluggish demand and weak investment, according to recent credit data from the People's Bank of China. In May, new bank loans totaled 520 billion yuan, a decrease from the 620 billion yuan recorded in the same period last year. This underperformance is evident in both corporate and household lending. Notably, outstanding household lending fell by 141 billion yuan in May, contributing to a cumulative drop of 631 billion yuan for the first five months of 2026. Analysts suggest this household deleveraging is impacting the corporate sector. The tech sector is identified as a sole bright spot amidst these economic challenges.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedHouseholds' weak appetite for debt is spilling over into the corporate sector.
The cumulative drop in household lending for the first five months of 2026 reached 631 billion yuan.
Outstanding household lending fell by 141 billion yuan in May.
New bank loans in China totaled 520 billion yuan (US$77 billion) in May, a decrease from the same period last year.
The tech sector is a bright spot amid the government's push for innovation.