China’s producer price index surged, the first such increase in nearly four years.
In April 2026, the country’s PPI, which tracks the prices that factories charge for goods, rose to a 45-month high. The reason is simple and clear. Supply disruptions related to the Iran war and escalating tensions around the Strait of Hormuz have driven up energy prices, dramatically increasing the cost of producing almost everything.
China endured 41 consecutive months of producer price declines, with the index finally turning positive at +0.5% in March 2026. A month later, the numbers exceeded expectations.
Energy costs are rewriting factory economics
Oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz. The strait will collapse. Crude oil prices soar. And because oil is the raw material for plastics, chemicals, synthetic fibers, and numerous industrial inputs, factories that rely on these materials suddenly find themselves facing unbudgeted bills.
In southern China, particularly in the manufacturing hub of Changwu, factories are reporting raw material costs rising by 30-50%. Vacuum cleaners and e-cigarettes cost between one-third and one-half more to manufacture than they did before the energy crash.
Production in these regions has slowed dramatically. Orders from overseas are declining as overseas buyers balk at rising prices or stop buying altogether while they figure out their profits.
From deflation to inflation in 60 days
The transition from deflation to the highest level of inflation in 45 months was not driven by a healthy recovery in demand. This was caused by a supply shock that raised costs without increasing customers’ willingness to pay more.
China maintains strategic oil reserves, and years of investment in renewable energy infrastructure provide some cushion against pure oil dependence. But when raw material costs increase by 30-50% over a few weeks, “some buffer” and “adequate buffer” are two very different things.
What this means for investors
When the world’s largest exporter of manufactured goods faces persistent input cost shocks, those costs end up moving through the supply chain and onto the shelves of consumers everywhere. If the energy situation continues, global prices for everyday goods could rise.
A decline in overseas orders from Chinese factories suggests that global trade volumes may be in trouble. Companies that rely on Chinese suppliers for parts or finished goods may face delays, increased costs, or both.
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