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China's investment growth may have hit bottom, say analysts

But hopes rise as experts expect expansion to pick up after easing policies

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The statistics are the latest poor data to emerge in China, whose gross domestic product grew by 7.4 per cent in 2014, the lowest rate in nearly 25 years. Photo: Bloomberg

The mainland's investment growth slumped to its lowest in more than a decade, but hopes are rising that economic expansion has bottomed, thanks to Beijing's latest efforts to ease local governments' debt burden and pump in liquidity, analysts say.

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Fixed-asset investment growth slowed to 12 per cent in the first four months of the year from a year earlier, compared with a 13.5 per cent year-on-year expansion in the first quarter, the National Bureau of Statistics said yesterday.

That put April's investment growth at less than 10 per cent, the first single-digit growth since 2003. Property investment growth almost stalled last month. Industrial output picked up only slightly to 5.9 per cent in April from 5.6 per cent in March.

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The Shanghai stock market slipped 0.58 per cent yesterday despite soaring real estate shares. The Hong Kong stock market also fell 0.58 per cent.

Central bank data shows lending has slowed, with new yuan loans falling to 708 billion yuan (HK$897 billion) last month, down from the 1.2 trillion yuan extended in March.

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