BTCC / BTCC Square / Cryptopolitan /
China’s 5% Q1 2026 Growth Sparks Dilemma: Iran’s Oil or US Alignment?

China’s 5% Q1 2026 Growth Sparks Dilemma: Iran’s Oil or US Alignment?

Cryptopolitan
Release Time:
2026-04-16 11:50:43
0

Iran's oil or US alignment: China faces tough choices after 5% Q1 2026 growth

China faces critical strategic choices as its economy posts stronger-than-expected 5% Q1 2026 growth, with officials warning of 'complex and volatile' external conditions amid soaring energy prices from the US-Israel-Iran conflict. The National Bureau of Statistics reported Thursday that first-quarter expansion exceeded analyst forecasts, marking acceleration from last quarter's 4.5% growth, while highlighting structural imbalances between strong supply and weak domestic demand.

China’s bet on high-tech manufacturing and green energy is working

Electric vehicle exports jumped 78% from last year. Lithium battery sales went up 50%, and wind turbine equipment rose 45%, customs officials said.

“Despite the energy price shock, exports should stay solid in the coming quarters, thanks to strong demand for semiconductors and green technologies,” Huang said earlier this week.

But people aren’t spending much at home. Retail sales grew just 1.7% in March compared to last year, down from 2.8% in the first two months. Factory output rose 5.7%, slower than before but still better than expected.

“China’s retail sales momentum is fading as subsidy impacts wane and auto demand softens,” said Ying Zhang, an analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit. She was talking about a program Beijing started in 2024 to get people to buy new appliances and cars.

“The absence of structural reforms so far means consumption will remain a weak growth driver throughout 2026,” Zhang said.

Factory prices went up for the first time in more than three years. The producer price index climbed 0.5% in March compared to last year. That ended a slide that had been going on since September 2022. But analysts say rising costs from expensive oil could hurt households that are already spending less.

Things with Washington are getting tense

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Wednesday that America is ready to put secondary sanctions on Chinese banks if they’re handling Iranian money.

“Iran used to be the largest state sponsor of terrorism. China was purchasing more than 90 per cent of their oil, which is about 8 per cent of China’s energy needs,” Bessent said at a press briefing.

Two Chinese banks already got warning letters from the Treasury Department. “We told them that if we can prove that there is Iranian money flowing through your accounts, then we are willing to put on secondary sanctions,” Bessent said. He didn’t name the banks.

Numbers from the US Treasury Department show China cut its holdings of American government debt to $693.3 billion in February, down from $694.4 billion in January. The International Monetary Fund thinks China’s economy will grow 4.4% this year.

Last year, China’s trade surplus hit a record 1.2 trillion. That shows how much the economy depends on exports at a time when things are getting more uncertain around the world.

The smartest crypto minds already read our newsletter. Want in? Join them.

Articles on this site are sourced from public networks or curated by AI for informational purposes only and do not represent BTCC’s views. Original rights belong to the respective authors. For copyright concerns, please contact [email protected]. BTCC assumes no liability for the accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of this information, and disclaims all liability arising from reliance on such content. This content is for reference only and should not be taken as investment, legal, or commercial advice.

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users