Take Two: China’s GDP growth slows; Japan’s Nikkei hits record high
What do you need to know?
China’s economy expanded by 4.8% in the third quarter (Q3) - its weakest pace in a year and down from 5.2% in Q2 – amid ongoing trade tensions with the US and property market challenges. Overall, China’s government is targeting growth of around 5% for 2025. Resilience in exports helped to avoid a sharper slowdown, rising 8.3% year-on-year in September. Last week China’s Communist Party held its fourth plenum where participants discussed the 15th five-year plan for economic and social development. Among other areas, the government intends to focus on technological self-reliance, national security and the green transition.
Around the world
Japan’s Nikkei stock market index hit a record high last week reflecting investor optimism over the election of new Prime Minister, Sanae Takaichi, who is expected to consider a new economic stimulus package. Year to date, the index has surged more than 27%.* Meanwhile, Japanese business activity grew at its slowest rate in five months in October, the flash Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) showed. The composite index, which includes manufacturing and services, eased to 50.9 from 51.3 in September – a reading above 50 indicates expansion. Elsewhere, the Eurozone composite PMI rose to 52.2 in October, a 17-month high, from 51.2 the month before.
* In US dollar terms. Source: FactSet, as of 23 October 2025
Figure in focus: $1.2trn
Trade tariffs are projected to cost global businesses at least an additional $1.2trn this year, with around two thirds of the costs being passed onto consumers via higher prices, according to data provider S&P Global. Since 1 January, 2025 revenue forecasts have risen by $600bn while earnings expectations have fallen by $300bn, S&P said – suggesting firms are giving up profit margins to offset rising costs. However, the impact on profits is expected to be a temporary shock with expectations of “successful cost mitigation, not structural decline” and that company profit margins will largely recover by 2027.
Words of wisdom
Lithium iron phosphate battery: Also known as lithium-ferro phosphate (LFP) batteries, these are a type of rechargeable battery used in energy grid storage and electric vehicles due to their low cost, long lifecycle and resistance to overheating. New long-term energy storage projects using LFP batteries are being planned in markets around the world including in Japan, the UK, Canada and Italy, according to BloombergNEF. Overall, global energy storage capacity additions are expected to grow 23% this year, reaching a new record, it said. China will account for more than half the extra installations, followed by the US.
What’s coming up?
Monetary policy is in focus this week, with several central banks convening to set interest rates. The Federal Reserve (Fed) and Bank of Canada each meet on Wednesday – at its last meeting, the Fed cut interest rates by 25 basis points to 4.0%-4.25%. On Thursday the Bank of Japan and European Central Bank (ECB) follow with their own monetary policy meetings – the ECB opted to leave interest rates unchanged at 2.0% in September. In terms of economic data, the Eurozone issues its flash Q3 GDP growth data on Thursday and a flash inflation estimate on Friday.
Read more insights and views at the AXA IM Investment Institute
Disclaimer
The information on this website is intended for investors domiciled in Switzerland.
AXA Investment Managers Switzerland Ltd (AXA IM) is not liable for unauthorised use of the website.
This website is for advertising and informational purpose only. The published information and expression of opinions are provided for personal use only. The information, data, figures, opinions, statements, analyses, forecasts, simulations, concepts and other data provided by AXA IM in this document are based on our knowledge and experience at the time of preparation and are subject to change without notice.
AXA IM excludes any warranty (explicit or implicit) for the accuracy, completeness and up-to-dateness of the published information and expressions of opinion. In particular, AXA IM is not obliged to remove information that is no longer up to date or to expressly mark it a such. To the extent that the data contained in this document originates from third parties, AXA IM is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, up-to-dateness and appropriateness of such data, even if only such data is used that is deemed to be reliable.
The information on the website of AXA IM does not constitute a decision aid for economic, legal, tax or other advisory questions, nor may investment or other decisions be made solely on the basis of this information. Before any investment decision is made, detailed advice should be obtained that is geared to the client's situation.
Past performance or returns are neither a guarantee nor an indicator of the future performance or investment returns. The value and return on an investment is not guaranteed. It can rise and fall and investors may even incur a total loss.
AXA Investment Managers Switzerland Ltd.