China Vows to Hit Economic Goals, Stops Short of Large Stimulus

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(Bloomberg) -- China said it’s confident in reaching its economic targets this year and promised to further support growth, although it held back in unleashing more major stimulus in a disappointment to investors looking for more fuel for a world-beating stock rally.

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Officials in the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s economic planning agency, said Tuesday they would speed up spending while largely reiterating plans to boost investment and increase direct support for low-income groups and new graduates. They added that China would continue to issue ultra-long sovereign bonds next year to support major projects.

The authorities will also bring forward to this year 100 billion yuan ($14 billion) in central government investment originally budgeted for 2025 and add another 100 billion yuan in spending on key strategic areas in 2024.

“We are fully confident in achieving the annual economic and social development targets,” Zheng Shanjie, the NDRC’s chairman, told reporters in the government’s first briefing following a week-long national holiday. He noted that China is facing a more complex environment at home and abroad.

A rally in onshore Chinese stocks on their return from a week-long holiday fizzled quickly as traders questioned Beijing’s resolve to add more stimulus. The benchmark CSI 300 Index closed up 5.9% after surging almost 11% at the open. A gauge of Chinese shares listed in Hong Kong tumbled 10.2%, its worst day since 2008.

“Nothing much is new compared to the previous announcements, and the latest commitment to fiscal stimulus looks weaker than market expectations,” said Gary Ng, senior economist at Natixis SA. “The front-loading of fiscal spending will only help stabilize growth and will not be enough to engineer a sharper rebound.”

The press briefing was closely watched for further steps to lift the economy after Chinese leaders signaled a desire to draw a line under the nation’s growth slump. A barrage of measures from the central bank raised expectations for additional fiscal stimulus worth trillions of yuan to boost confidence, although skepticism lingers over whether they could sustain growth.