China’s official non-manufacturing PMI, published by the National Bureau of Statistics, rose to 50.2 in June. That compared with a market forecast of 49.9 and places the gauge just above the 50-point threshold that separates expansion from contraction.
The reading indicates a marginal improvement in activity across services and construction at the end of the second quarter. With the index moving from below consensus to above it, the data point suggests conditions were slightly firmer than expected, while remaining close to flat overall.
Implications For Currencies And Commodities
The June non-manufacturing PMI came in at 50.2, just beating expectations and pushing back into expansion territory. This suggests China’s vast services sector is finding a floor after a period of weakness. We see this as a signal to cautiously add exposure to assets sensitive to Chinese domestic demand.
We are looking at the Australian dollar, which often acts as a liquid proxy for Chinese economic health. Recent data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics shows iron ore shipments to China rose 3% in the second quarter of 2026, and this PMI figure supports continued demand. We believe buying short-dated AUD/USD call options offers a good risk-reward profile for the coming weeks.
This data should also provide some support for industrial metals, especially copper. Looking back, a similar PMI beat in the fourth quarter of 2024 preceded a 6% rally in copper prices over the subsequent month. We are therefore considering building a modest long position in copper futures contracts.
Equity Market Opportunities
For equities, this could boost sentiment for Chinese technology and consumer services stocks. Last week’s reports of a 5% year-over-year increase in domestic travel bookings for the upcoming holiday period already hinted at a recovery. We think purchasing call spreads on China-focused ETFs is a measured way to participate in a potential relief rally.