
The offshore yuan firmed to around 6.77 per dollar on Wednesday as investors assessed the latest inflation data and their implications for China’s economic outlook. Consumer inflation rose 1.2% annually in May 2026, slightly below expectations of 1.3%, indicating that weak household demand continued to offset inflationary pressures from higher global energy prices linked to the Middle East conflict. Meanwhile, producer prices climbed to 3.9% from 2.8% in April and marking the highest reading since July 2022. The increase extended the recovery from China’s long producer-price deflation period, driven largely by higher commodity and energy costs. While China has cushioned part of the energy shock through its strategic oil reserves and renewable energy capacity, persistent cost pressures could squeeze corporate profit margins. A broader pass-through to consumer prices could also erode household consumption, although weak domestic demand has so far limited such spillovers.
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