China’s credit expansion abruptly reversed in April 2026, with new loans contracting by 10.0 billion yuan, following a massive 2,990.0 billion yuan increase in March 2026. The latest data, updated on 14 May 2026, mark a sharp swing from heavy credit issuance to a net pullback in lending.
The move from a strong March lending figure to negative net new loans in April suggests a sudden tightening in credit conditions or a pause after front‑loaded borrowing earlier in the year. Such volatility in monthly loan data is closely watched by markets as a proxy for domestic demand, investment appetite and the broader policy stance in the world’s second‑largest economy.