China's $52 trillion banking industry is facing an increasingly difficult year, with its largest lenders cutting loan rates while bad debt is piling up amid a property crisis
China's manufacturing purchasing managers index rose to 49.4 from 49 in July, according to a statement from the National Bureau of Statistics
China's distressed-debt managers have been in turmoil as aggressive lending to embattled developers and unchecked expansion into other areas has beset the $730 billion funds with heavy credit losses
China stepped up its economic stimulus with a further 1 trillion yuan of measures to bolster growth and curb the fallout of repeated Covid lockdowns and the crisis in the property market
The measures -- unveiled by the State Council, the country's Cabinet -- include more than 1 trillion yuan ($146 billion) in new funding to boost investment and consumption, as well as more flexibility
Chinese authorities said they were investigating at least four current and former top managers, including Xiamen C&D Real Estate Chairman Zhuang Yuekai, who is suspected of "serious" law violations
Foreign nationals holding a valid Chinese residence permit for study or an APEC business travel card will be allowed to enter China starting today
China Evergrande Group's debt blowup, with the tumbling home prices and mortgage boycotts that followed, have sent the economy into its deepest spin since the Cultural Revolution
Some state-owned Chinese banks are extending loans to companies and then allowing them to deposit funds at the same interest rate
Chinese equities are seen making up lost ground as the extreme pessimism toward its economy recedes and authorities take further steps to revive stuttering growth
China's local governments could sell more than $229 billion of bonds to fund infrastructure investment and plug budget gaps
Data this past week showed a dismal picture: China's industrial output rose 3.8% from a year earlier, which was below expectations, fixed investment grew slower than forecast and credit was weak
China's economy, hit by the stringent zero-COVID policy, is currently passing through a critical stage of stabilisation, Premier Li Keqiang has said as he asked the provinces to tighten their belts and put existing assets to better use to consolidate the recovery. Li's call on Tuesday came as the world's second-largest economy showed signs of stress due to periodic COVID lockdowns in top Chinese cities like Shanghai and Shenzhen as well as China's travel restrictions limiting travel with the rest of the world to control the pandemic within the country. The second-ranking leader of the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC) who is set to retire this year after a 10-year stint, presided over a symposium on the economic situation at Shenzhen, China's top industrial city, in which leading officials of six major economic provinces -- Guangdong, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Shandong, Henan and Sichuan -- took part via video link. Li stressed efforts to shore up market entities, stabilise employment
Oil prices fell on Tuesday, extending losses from the previous session, after economic data from China spurred fresh concerns about a potential global recession that could hit energy demand
China's Central bank data showed a sharp slowdown in aggregate financing, a broad measure of credit, in July, as new loans and corporate bond issuance weakened
China's largest chipmaker reported revenue rose 42% to $1.9 billion in the second quarter, generally in line with expectations
The consumer price index in China rose 2.7% last month from a year earlier as pork prices surged 20.2%
Almost a third of China's steel mills could go into bankruptcy in a squeeze that's likely to last five years
Asian share markets got off to a slow start on Monday as disappointing Chinese economic data fed doubts last week's rally on Wall Street could be sustained in the face of determined policy tightening
Chinese manufacturing's recovery from anti-virus shutdowns faltered in July as activity sank, a survey showed on Sunday