Foreign Investment in China Grew Slower in August
By wchung | 08 Jun, 2026
Foreign investment in China weakened again in August after rebounding from a slowdown earlier this year, the government reported Wednesday.
Foreign direct investment rose 1.4 percent over a year earlier to $7.6 billion, Commerce Ministry spokesman Yao Jian said at a news conference. That was down from July’s robust 29.2 percent.
FDI includes spending on factories, real estate and other assets but excludes investment in stocks and other financial instruments.
China is one of the world’s top investment destinations but spending plunged due to the global financial crisis. Growth fell to 1.1 percent in February before rebounding to double-digit levels.
For the eight-month period from January to August, FDI rose 18.1 percent over the same period last year to $66 billion, according to Yao.
___
AP researcher Bonnie Cao contributed.
BEIJING (AP)
Recent Articles
- China May Exports Pegged for Strong Growth on Front-Loaded Orders, Chip Demand
- China's Global E-Commerce Slides as Iran War Lifts Costs, Dampens Demand
- S. Korea to Seek Priority Supply of Nvidia Vera Rubin GPUs
- VinFast Q1 Revenue Surges on Strong Southeast Asia EV Demand
- KOSPI Plunges on Fed Rate Hike Bet
- Nvidia Clinches Pacts with S. Korean Tech Giants Deep into the AI Boom
- Gwynne Shotwell Manifested Musk's Lofty SpaceX IPO
- Lip-Bu Tan's Intel Eyed to Make Three Million Custom AI Chips for Google
- Cerebras Gets Street Behind Its Unique Dinner-Plate AI Chips
- Election Betting Boom to Test US Insider Trading Controls for Prediction Markets
