Global Markets

China Cuts Interest Rates Again as Property Crisis Deepens: Implications for India’s China+1 Story

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) cut its 1-year Loan Prime Rate by 25bps to 2.85% and the 5-year LPR (mortgage rate) by 25bps to 3.35% — the third rate cut in six months. The move signals deepening concern about China’s economic slowdown, which is driven by the worst property crisis in modern Chinese history.

China’s Economy: By the Numbers

  • GDP Growth: 4.5% in 2025 (officially), likely lower in reality. Q1 2026 on track for 4.2%
  • Property: New home prices have fallen for 24 consecutive months. Unsold inventory is at 7 years of supply. Major developers including Country Garden and Vanke are in restructuring
  • Deflation: CPI has been at or below zero for 18 of the last 20 months. PPI negative for 30+ months
  • Youth Unemployment: 16.5% officially (likely 20%+ in reality, as the government stopped publishing the full figure)
  • Consumer Confidence: At its lowest since the data series began in 1990

Why China’s Pain Is India’s Gain

The China+1 strategy — where global companies diversify manufacturing away from China — is accelerating due to:

  1. Tariff differential: US tariffs on China at 54% vs India at 26% make India relatively more competitive
  2. Apple’s India push: 18% of iPhones now made in India (up from 7% in 2023). Foxconn and Tata Electronics expanding rapidly
  3. Electronics manufacturing: India’s electronics exports hit Rs 2.2 lakh crore in FY26 (+30% YoY)
  4. Chemical shift: Global chemical companies moving sourcing from China to India. SRF, PI Industries, Aarti Industries, and Deepak Nitrite are key beneficiaries

India Beneficiary Stocks

  • Dixon Technologies: Google Pixel, Samsung ODM contracts moving from China
  • Amber Enterprises: AC components shifting from Chinese to Indian suppliers
  • SRF Limited: Specialty chemicals gaining global market share from Chinese competitors
  • Sona BLW: EV components for global OEMs diversifying from China supply chain

Risk: Chinese Stimulus

The biggest risk to the India trade is a massive Chinese stimulus. If Beijing announces a $500 billion+ property bailout or consumption stimulus, expect a sharp rotation from India to China in global EM portfolios. However, most analysts believe Beijing is unlikely to launch “bazooka” stimulus given its focus on debt sustainability.

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