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(Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
(Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

China’s bad economic news continues to drive up stocks

Help is on the way for the beleaguered economy. Eventually. Right?

As I’ve been saying for a while, China’s ugly economy is turning into a bullish talking point for Chinese traders, with today’s lackluster GDP numbers from the East Asian hegemon reinforcing that dynamic.

Chinese output grew by 4.6% year-on-year in the third quarter, according to official numbers released by the National Bureau of Statistics. That was a tad slower than the second quarter’s 4.7% annual rate of growth, but a touch faster than analysts had expected.

The details matter less than the key storyline, which continues to be the fact that China is struggling mightily against a deflationary tide created by a cataclysmic bust in its housing market.

A key arrow in the monetary quiver in this kind of scenario is a bond-buying binge from the central bank. Such programs, referred to broadly and somewhat inaccurately as “money printing,” were what the US Federal Reserve undertook in the wake of America’s own housing bust that began in the late 2000s. Showerings of this so-called “helicopter money” tend to lift the spirits of stock-market investors, as they’re partially intended to.

That’s why I’ve argued that the worse China’s economy gets, the more likely it is that Xi Jinping will be forced to fire up the People’s Bank of China’s fleet of helicopters sometime soon.

And in recent weeks, the Chinese stock market has soared as investors could almost hear the “chup-chup-chup” of the monetary choppers. But that air cavalry never arrived, prompting a tumble in Chinese share prices over the last week or so.

The message from Chinese policymakers in the wake of Friday’s lackluster GDP report — it was the slowest growth rate in over a year — was that help continues to be on the way. PBOC governor Pan Gongsheng told a conference Friday that the central bank could cut rates again on Monday, and revealed details of two new central-bank programs aimed at channeling cash into Chinese stocks.

The result was a pretty rosy day for Chinese shares, with the CSI 300 finishing up 3.6% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rising 3.2%.

Of course, if they want the markets to continue to rise, reinvigorating deeply dour Chinese consumer sentiment — just check out Procter & Gamble’s earnings report, also released Friday — eventually Chinese policymakers are going to have to come through with the flood of free, freshly created cash that the market is expecting/demanding.

That’s something they’ve seemed a bit reluctant to do.

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Spectrum owner Charter Communications is on pace for its worst day ever as broadband numbers and Q1 results disappoint

Cable and broadband company Charter Communications is on pace for its worst-ever trading day on Friday, as investors dump the stock following its Q1 results and forward guidance.

Charter, which owns Spectrum, reported adjusted earnings of $9.17 per share, below Wall Street estimates of $9.96 per share from analysts polled by FactSet. On the company’s earnings call, CFO Jessica Fischer appeared to lower its guidance for full-year revenue per user.

“It’ll be close either way in terms of whether we end up with net growth,” Fischer said.

The company lost 120,000 internet subscribers in the quarter, deeper than the expected 94,800 and double its loss from the same period last year. That news comes one day after Comcast’s earnings provided a bit of optimism for broadband as a category: the company reported Q1 losses of 65,000, significantly improving from 183,000 losses in the same quarter last year. Comcast is down more than 10%, on pace for its worst day since January 2025.

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Luke Kawa

Nvidia poised to snap longest run without a record close since the AI boom began

The stock price of the company responsible for the brains of the AI boom is finally showing some brawn again.

Nvidia, the world’s most valuable company, is poised to close at a record high for the first time since October 29, 2025, on Friday (if it ends above $207.04).

The AI chip trade is on fire, with the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index slated to deliver its 18th consecutive gain as Intel’s robust results and outlook juice the entire ecosystem. Hyperscalers report earnings next week, and their capex guidance can be thought of as the earnings guidance for Nvidia and other AI suppliers for the quarters to come.

This would end Nvidia’s longest stretch without a record close since the unofficial start of the AI boom (when the chip designer delivered blowout quarterly results in May 2023).

(Sorry if I jinx this!)

markets

Lilly slips after prescriptions for its weight-loss pill come in below expectations in second week

Eli Lilly fell on Friday after prescription data for its new weight-loss pill, Foundayo, showed that it’s having a significantly slower rollout than its top competitor.

The pill was prescribed about 3,700 times in its second week, according to IQVIA data cited by Deutsche Bank analysts, compared to the roughly 8,000 they were expecting. Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy pill, which came out in January, hit over 18,000 prescriptions in its second week.

The FDA approved Foundayo on April 1 and shipments began on April 9. Deutsche analysts noted that Lilly’s GLP-1 injections, which currently outsell Novo’s, also had a slower start.

Lilly fell more than 4% after the numbers were released. Novo Nordisk rose more than 5%.

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