KEY POINTS
  • China's services and consumption data of April came in strong, aligning with expectations of consumers leading the charge as pent-up demand is unleashed — but the broadening of the resurgence from services to goods was still limited.
  • Georgios Leontaris, EMEA chief investment officer at HSBC Global Private Banking and Wealth, told CNBC on Monday that the combination of weak labor and goods demand may force the Chinese government and central bank into action.
  • Despite the weakness in the April data, Goldman Sachs Chief China Economist Hui Shan said there has been little sign of imminent major macro policy easing, while the PBOC's first-quarter monetary policy report "sounded neutral."
Shanghai's city skyline as seen from observation deck at Shanghai Tower in China.

China's much-vaunted economic rebound after its emergence from strict zero-Covid lockdown measures has yet to fully materialize, prompting some economists to speculate that further fiscal stimulus or monetary policy easing could be coming down the pipeline.

China's services and consumption data came in strong in April, aligning with expectations of consumers leading the charge as pent-up demand is unleashed — but the rebound in the call for services isn't yet spilling over into greater demand for goods, partly because unemployment remains high.