Group 1 - The core viewpoint of the article discusses the economic "temperature difference" at the end of 2025, highlighting a divergence between macro indicators like PMI and micro indicators such as production and consumption [2][4][10] - At the end of 2025, production indicators such as high furnace operation and PTA operation showed a decline, while manufacturing PMI increased by 0.9 percentage points to 50.1% in December [2][10] - Consumer high-frequency indicators continued to decline at the end of 2025, yet the overall consumer goods industry PMI rose to 50.4%, indicating a recovery in certain sectors like textiles and apparel [20][10] Group 2 - Investment indicators such as asphalt operation rates and cement shipment rates did not show significant improvement, but the construction industry PMI rose by 3.2 percentage points to 52.8% at the end of 2025 [3][32][10] - The article identifies three reasons for the divergence in macro and micro indicators: the shift in economic growth momentum, the risk of demand overextension in consumer sectors, and the impact of previous debt issues on investment rhythms [4][5][44][67] Group 3 - The article anticipates that service consumption and new infrastructure investments will contribute more than expected to the economy at the beginning of 2026, despite pressures on commodity consumption due to the tapering of "old-for-new" policies [6][78][82] - The easing of the debt impact on investment is expected to lead to a rebound in broad infrastructure and service sector investments in early 2026, with a focus on digital infrastructure and carbon reduction investments [82][86] - The delayed Spring Festival in 2026 is projected to extend the "export rush" window, potentially boosting January export figures [105][110]
月度前瞻 | 再议宏微观“温差”(申万宏观·赵伟团队)
赵伟宏观探索·2026-01-12 16:04