China Sees Biggest Capital Outflux In 8 Years Where Is It Heading

Last updated: June 8, 2025, 22:15

China Sees Biggest Capital Outflux In 8 Years Where Is It Heading

China is grappling with the

China has record foreign investment outflow as US$168 billion exit

China’s worst capital outflow in years spells more

China is grappling with the largest capital flight in years, raising concerns for authorities as Beijing exerts additional pressure on the yuan, which is already under strain due

According to data compiled by

According to data compiled by Bloomberg China saw its most significant capital flight in the last 8 years in the month of August The world amp rsquo s second-largest

China Sees Biggest Capital Flight in Seven Years As $5,100,000,000

Weak Yuan (CNY USD) Pressured by Worst China Capital Outflow

Banking giant Goldman Sachs says

Banking giant Goldman Sachs says that China is weathering the biggest capital flight since 2025 amid struggling equities markets.

China Sees $49 Billion in Capital Outflow in August Amid

China Sees Biggest Capital Outflux in 8 Years, Where is it Heading? According to data compiled by Bloomberg, China saw its most significant capital flight in the

China is witnessing the biggest

China is witnessing the biggest flight of capital in years, creating concern for authorities as it worsens pressure on the beleaguered yuan.

China Sees Biggest Capital Outflux in 8 Years, Where is it Heading?

CHINA saw record outflows of foreign direct investment (FDI) last year, an exodus that threatens to persist after the resumption of a trade war with the US. Net FDI

China experienced its largest capital

China’s Worst Capital Outflow in Years Exacerbates Yuan Woes

China’s worst capital outflow in years spells more Yuan pressure

China experienced its largest capital outflow since 2025, with $49 billion leaving the country, as economic concerns prompt investors to withdraw; of this, $29 billion was withdrawn from

The Chinese currency has slumped

The Chinese currency has slumped more than 5% this year both onshore and offshore, marking the worst performance in emerging Asia after Malaysia’s ringgit. Still