SHANGHAI, Jan 11, 2026, 04:58 GMT+8 — Market closed
- China Mobile’s Class A shares on the Shanghai exchange closed Friday unchanged, underperforming the wider market’s gains.
- New inflation figures sharpened investor focus on how quickly policy easing might unfold in 2026.
- Traders await China’s mid-January credit and trade data for the next signal.
China Mobile Limited’s Class A shares (600941.SS) closed flat at 100.12 yuan on Friday, lagging behind the Shanghai Composite, which gained 0.92%. (SSE)
The split is crucial at the moment as telecom stocks in China have been behaving like defensive income assets. Yet, fresh macro data is shaking up rate expectations. Once trading resumes, investors will be weighing if “high yield and stable” suffices or if a stronger growth narrative is necessary.
China’s consumer price index climbed 0.8% in December year-on-year, while the producer price index, tracking factory-gate prices, dropped 1.9%, according to data released. Lynn Song, ING’s chief economist for Greater China, noted that inflation “remains relatively low” and is unlikely to block further monetary easing this year. Meanwhile, Zichun Huang at Capital Economics pointed out that the CPI rise doesn’t signal a broad fix to overcapacity and cautioned that deflationary pressures may linger without stronger demand-side policies. (Reuters)
Credit is the next hurdle. According to a Reuters poll of economists, net new yuan loans in December are expected to hit about 800 billion yuan, a sharp rise from 390 billion yuan in November. Citi Research analysts suggest that a 500 billion yuan policy-financing tool “could have started to pass through” into new lending. The poll also highlighted total social financing (TSF) — a broad measure covering bank loans and off-balance-sheet funding like bond sales — as another key figure investors will watch closely. (Reuters)
China Mobile’s stock felt the pressure again on Friday, sliding between 99.54 and 100.36 yuan on turnover near 1.82 billion yuan. The 14-day relative strength index (RSI) hovered around 29, signaling an oversold condition to many traders. For the past month, the shares have been stuck in a tight 100–105 yuan band. The dividend yield was about 4.66%, with a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio close to 15. Meanwhile, the Hong Kong-listed shares (0941.HK) were trading at roughly a 28% discount to the Shanghai listing—a spread investors tracking Stock Connect flows keep an eye on. (AAStocks)
Peers outpaced slightly within the same macro environment. China Telecom ticked up 0.64% on Friday, while China Unicom climbed 3.24%, according to the data.
When nerves hit the market, telecom stocks often act like bond proxies, thanks to their dividend appeal. Yet this trade hinges on interest rate moves and policy signals—both now driven more by data than by company news.
There’s a risk here. If inflation remains stubborn and credit growth stalls, investors face a tricky situation: limited scope for easing with no obvious rebound in demand. That often drains appetite for slow-moving yield plays.
Monday sees mainland markets back in action, with eyes on China’s upcoming data for new yuan loans and the Jan. 14 trade balance. These figures will offer fresh clues on how stimulus and domestic demand are holding up. (Investing)