According to data released on April 16 by the National Bureau of Statistics of China, China’s GDP grew 5% year over year in Q1 2026, accelerating by 0.5 percentage points from 4.5% in Q4 2025, with the quarterly total reaching 33.4 trillion yuan (about $4.87 trillion). Amid geopolitical pressures as the U.S.-Iran war escalates and global oil prices stay at high levels, China’s economy still holds the lower bound of the policy goal of “making progress while maintaining stability.” AP reported that the direct impact of the U.S.-Iran conflict on China’s first quarter was relatively limited.
High-tech and equipment manufacturing drive the growth rate
Detailed sub-item data show that China’s value-added industrial output above a designated size increased 6.1% year over year, including equipment manufacturing up 8.9% and high-tech manufacturing up 12.5%. These two combined are the main engines pulling Q1 GDP, showing that, against the backdrop of the U.S.-China tech war and export controls, China has turned exports of high value-added items such as AI hardware, new energy vehicles, and semiconductor equipment into new growth pillars through domestic substitution and capacity expansion.
Correspondingly, retail sales of consumer goods rose by only 2.4% year over year, with the cumulative total for January–March at 12.77 trillion yuan. The divergence between relatively weak domestic demand and relatively strong manufacturing continues the structural characteristics seen since 2024—China’s GDP is still driven by investment and exports rather than consumer recovery.
Total imports and exports +15% expand against the odds under the shadow of war
China’s total imports and exports in Q1 2026 reached 11.84 trillion yuan, up 15% year over year. This figure is quite notable because, in the same period, global trade faced broad pressure due to the U.S.-Iran war, disruptions to Red Sea shipping routes, and rising European energy costs. China’s export expansion mainly absorbed demand through three pathways: re-pricing trade with ASEAN and emerging markets; expanding the export volume of green-energy products such as electric vehicles and photovoltaic power; and rerouting some transshipment trade that had originally flowed to the United States to third-party markets such as Mexico and Turkey.
Economic data “cards” shown by the Chinese side before the summit meeting
The timing of the Q1 data release is also worth noting. On April 16, the National Bureau of Statistics of China published the data, with less than a month remaining until the China-U.S. summit on May 14. A 5% GDP growth rate, a doubled growth rate in high-tech manufacturing, and the resilience on the export side are equivalent to Beijing placing “economic resilience” cards on the negotiating table. The U.S. has recently launched secondary sanctions targeting Chinese banks; in response, China is showing signals—through macroeconomic data—that it can still maintain its growth momentum under sanctions.
Indirect impact on crypto and Hong Kong stocks
For the crypto market, China keeping its growth at 5% would reduce the immediate pressure from a global recession scenario, which could lower the correlation for BTC as a risk asset. But if growth in the next quarter weakens under the long-tail effects of the U.S.-Iran war, the People’s Bank of China’s easing actions may release new liquidity, boosting themes such as renminbi-pegged stablecoins and Hong Kong cross-border payments. Taiwan investors should also pay attention to the +12.5% figure for high-tech manufacturing, which implies that China’s self-sufficiency in semiconductors and AI hardware is accelerating, creating pressure on the long- and medium-term order structure of Taiwan’s supply chain.
This article China Q1 2026 GDP grows 5%: Holds policy goals amid the impact of the U.S.-Iran war, with high-end manufacturing growing 12.5% carrying the growth rate first appeared in Chain News ABMedia.
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