Below is the article, and boy, does it contain some very juicy tidbits that the Chinese have worked hard to keep the lid on. The plastics development is something that shows China is hurting as well, regardless of what is going on with Iran.
China’s strategic reserves of oil and natural gas have insulated it somewhat, but its manufacturing-based economy is beginning to falter.
By Keith Bradsher
Reporting from Beijing
April 27, 2026
Rising oil and natural gas prices from the war in Iran are beginning to weigh on the Chinese economy, further slowing already anemic consumer spending and hurting critical export sectors.
Car sales fell in March and plunged further in April. Restaurants and hotels are seeing fewer customers as households turn cautious. In southern China, thousands of toy factory workers protested last week after their employer collapsed under rising plastic costs and ongoing tariffs in the United States.
The emerging signs of strain underscore how even China, with vast strategic oil reserves and massive investments in renewable energy, is not immune to the forces pressuring economies worldwide.
For many weeks, China had appeared to weather the fallout from the war, a view reinforced by fairly strong economic data through March. But with the war in its ninth week with no clear end, cracks are beginning to show.
“The economy is decelerating,” said Alicia García-Herrero, chief economist for Asia Pacific at Natixis, a French financial firm. China may struggle to meet this year’s growth target of 4.5 percent or more, she added.
One of the clearest signs of emerging weakness is in car sales and production, often considered early indicators of trouble. Cars are the second-largest purchase for many Chinese households after apartments, and the industry drives demand for steel, glass and other materials.
China’s retail car sales plunged 26 percent in the first 19 days of April from a year earlier, according to the China Passenger Car Association. While part of the drop reflects weaker electric-vehicle sales after tax incentives expired in December, gasoline-powered cars fared worse, falling by nearly 40 percent.
Falling sales have left dealership lots crowded with unsold cars, triggering production cutbacks. Chinese car factories made 27 percent fewer cars in the first two weeks of April than a year earlier, a sharp pullback even as exports rise.
At first glance, the economy still looks resilient. But a closer look suggests underlying weakness.
This month, China said that its economy grew at an annualized rate of 5.3 percent during the first three months of this year. But most of the strength was in January and February.
Retail sales decelerated in March, rising just 1.7 percent from a year ago. The China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said inventories of unsold goods continued to build. Michael Pettis, a Beijing economist, said rising inventories could drag on future growth.
On Monday, industrial profits data showed continued strength through March, offering a possible buffer against a downturn. But much of that gain came from chemical and energy firms cashing in on a one-time windfall from higher oil and gas prices after stockpiling cheaply before the war.
China’s strategic oil reserves and huge refineries leave it far less exposed than its Asian neighbors. China has also shielded consumers from the full brunt of rising fuel costs, permitting its state-controlled oil companies to pass along only half of any increase in oil prices.
The picture is grimmer in the toy industry.
Thousands of workers who lost their jobs took to the streets last week in southern China, staging daily protests to demand back pay and compensation from several toy factories that abruptly closed on April 20.
The closures came as costs for plastic, which is made from oil and natural gas, surged after traffic slowed through the Strait of Hormuz, the waterway connecting the Persian Gulf to energy buyers around the world. China’s toy industry was already under pressure from rising costs, foreign competition and President Trump’s tariffs.
The shuttered factories are in Yulin City, a low-wage toy manufacturing hub about 260 miles west of Hong Kong.
Workers draped banners across factory gates with slogans like, “Give me back my blood and sweat money.” In videos, protesters mill quietly while police officers in blue uniforms and reflective vests stand nearby.
Numerous short videos of the protests have circulated online in China. While displays of public unrest are usually censored, these clips have remained, possibly because the protests are peaceful and Beijing has urged companies to meet their obligations to workers.
Repeated calls on Friday and Monday to government and Communist Party offices in Yulin City went unanswered. The closed factories belong to Hong Kong-based Wah Shing Toys, which did not respond to phone calls and an email for comment.
The company’s Yulin subsidiary issued a statement to workers that quickly spread online, saying it was closing factories and filing for bankruptcy because of tough conditions abroad. The statement cited “escalating trade friction between China and the U.S. in recent years,” and a challenging overseas business environment, noting that unpaid bills from foreign customers had hurt its cash flow.
Soaring plastic prices have become a problem for China’s toy industry, including for another cluster of manufacturers in Shantou, a city located 190 miles northeast of Hong Kong, which produces a third of the world’s toys.
Ten days after the war started on Feb. 28, the Shantou Chenghai Toy Association warned of “hoarding and panic,” as plastic prices skyrocketed.
Murphy Zhao and Ruoxin Zhang contributed reporting and research.
The 'Greater Israel' project proposes that military aggression is justified to achieve the allegedly God given boundaries of the state of Israel.
'Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has suggested that Israel is destined to expand to include Jordan, and even beyond, to parts of Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and even Iraq.
In a documentary film by Arte in 2024, Smotrich said “it is written that the future of Jerusalem is to expand to Damascus.
This view has support in some parts of Israeli society. Israel’s incursions into Jordan and Syria has intensified international concerns that some actors in Israel are pursuing expansion into other countries...
In August 2025, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in an interview with Israeli TV channel i24News that he was on a "historic and spiritual mission" and that he is "very" attached to the vision of Greater Israel, which includes Palestinian areas and possibly also places that are part of Jordan, Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon.'
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_Israel
I never realized how much oil prices affected things like toys. It’s wild to think that a war in the Middle East can lead to protests at a toy factory in China just because the price of plastic went up
Oil and gas make up a ton of stuff and are why we won't see the industry go away anytime soon. As the article mentioned, this was just the final straw, as the trade war has pushed a lot of countries to the breaking point.
The war has been having a major impact on the economy.
Markets are staying relatively stable, surprisingly, to many analysts, but what is happening is that there is an increased cost of living for the average American.
Now, this is not only at the gas pump, where the price of petrol has risen sharply, but also in terms of everyday goods, because the single most important thing in terms of getting goods into the shops is diesel.
With the increasing price of diesel, transport costs go up. And, therefore, what Americans buy at the stores is increasing in cost.
This is going to have a political effect in the midterm elections later this year, because rising prices is something that President Trump insisted he would not allow. It was one of his campaign issues, and yet now, on his watch, prices are rising sharply.
Americans are noticing that, and certainly, it’s something that may impact which way they vote come November.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2026/4/28/iran-war-live-trump-reviews-peace-plan-un-calls-for-hormuz-to-reopen
The "get off oil" crowd seems pretty clueless. As do most people that want revolutions.
Chevron has done very well out of Trumps multiple attacks on competing suppliers of fossil fuels.
Europe has become dependent upon US LNG and the price Chevron can charge for US LNG has increased hugely.
The losers are traditional US allies, EU and Asian ones in particular.
The logic behind Middle East oil states relying on US petrodollar security arrangements is eroding now that the US is a major energy exporter and undermining their markets.
Trump is owned by Chevron and land grabbing Zionist Greater Israel war criminals.
China won the trade war.
Its mixed economy composed of both state capitalism and free enterprise can process raw materials more efficiently that any other industrialised nation.
This has come to the point of being an existential threat to the petrodollar as US debt closes in on $40 Trillion and Chinas annual trade surplus surpasses $1 Trillion.
China has become the major buyer of oil exporting nations which were foundational to USD/Petrodollar hegemony.
So Trump is responding like a typical poor loser imperialist bully and attacking Chinas energy suppliers- especially those who accept payment in Yuan.
The wealth and power of USA is built upon the petrodollar hegemony which is in turn dependent upon US military power projection capacity.
Iran has demonstrated that an asymmetric response to the declining effectiveness of the US military can result in stalemate and exposes the USA as a declining and ineffective 'security' partner.
How much Trump has to pay for plastic toys is the least of his concerns- he is revealing how unreliable and ineffective US military power projection has become.
It cannot build anymore of its high tech military equipment without the rare earths China now refuses to sell.
He has 2 days left before the US Congress need to grant him an extension of power to continue his unlawful trade embargo and invasion of Iran.
USA has run out of Interceptors and risks having its antiquated aircraft carriers blasted to the bottom of the sea by Iranian missiles.
The world is watching and the clock is ticking upon declining US empires petrodollar wealth and hegemony.
USA is losing in its desperate and unlawful attempts to block free trade and preserve the petrodollar via war crimes.
Unreliable? What's the PRC doing to rescue Venezuela, Cuba and Iran?
https://www.wsj.com/world/china/chinese-satellites-over-mideast-battlefield-put-u-s-on-edge-39e0d305
https://archive.ph/iNTTs
Note- Netanyahu’s corruption trial postponed again over ‘security reasons’...
Trump owned by Zionist war criminals and the world is watching.
Ten days hahahahaha talking about rare earths and you're already out of plastic xD
@Solomonsatoshi
USA is calm as shit right now.
Full throttle the exports! It is funny to see U.S. oil prices $10+ lower than the international price because we still have so much.
For instance, our natural gas price has been pretty much flat because we runnith over this nat gas.
' US-Gulf relations ‘reassessed’ after US-Israel attack on Iran
Countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) are reviewing their relationship with the United States after launching the war on Iran, an analyst says.
Zeidon Alkinani, founding director of Arab Perspectives Institute, says the United States ignored the warnings from allied Gulf states about the security and economic repercussions of attacking Iran, while following “Israeli geopolitical interests in the region”.'
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2026/4/28
USA is increasingly seen as an unreliable partner in terms of security from the middle east to Europe and beyond.
USA is now seen as a declining economic and military power...one beholden to Expansionary Zionist Greater Israel Project war crimes and genocide.
Europe is irrelevant. The gulf states are happy. Nobody likes Iran. No one is coming to their defense. No one has any sympathy or respect for the IRGC or the communist party.
Trump is owned by Chevron and The Greater Israel Project extremist war criminals that now rule Israel.
The world is watching.
The clock is ticking on the petrodollar.
The Saudis, UAE and others in the middle east are taking payment for oil in Yuan and have joined mBridge.
Israel Israel Israel.
聲西擊東. You communists drank too much of your own kool-aid if you actually think this is about the middle east.
As much communist as the pope is muslim.
The world has changed and you don't understand it.
The communist party of China is the most communist, most socialist political movement in history and will be judged as such.
Doesn't this cause higher prices for purchasers of their products in the long run?
They'll have to start buying from countries that are on friendlier terms with the US.
https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2026/4/28/how-the-us-israeli-war-is-collapsing-the-sanctions-regime-on-iran
'*Circumvention mechanisms already exist and the conflict is encouraging more entities to work with them....
For years, sociologists and political scientists have warned that sanctions do not work. They do not topple targeted governments; instead, they hurt their citizens. And yet, the use of sanctions has only expanded, with the US leading the charge. As a result, there is now increasing evidence that this over-reliance on such punitive measures has led to their growing ineffectiveness. The US-Israel war on Iran has made that all the more obvious.
The conflict carries the potential to push further the process of weakening the effect of US sanctions, which had already been ongoing, and reshape the preferences of both regional and global actors through different mechanisms, including de-dollarisation, alternative trading methods such as barter, and informal transfer networks like hawala.
The US relies on the dominance of its currency in global trade to leverage the sanctions it imposes. Sanctioned states are unable to carry out sanctioned trade because buyers and sellers process payments in dollars.
The spread of cryptocurrency as an alternative payment method across the world has provided a way to circumvent this problem. Over the past few years, Iran has come to heavily rely on cryptocurrency for financial transactions.
A report by blockchain data platform Chainanalysis shows that cryptocurrency flows to sanctioned entities went up remarkably in 2025, with their value rising 694 percent to a record $154bn – up from $59bn in 2024. In the final quarter of the year, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) alone accounted for 50 percent of value received – a total of $3bn.
Iran converts cryptocurrency holdings into renminbi, which is then used to buy Russian goods or conduct trade across Asian markets – embedding itself further into an alternative financial architecture that strengthens the renminbi.
The war on Iran may now expand the pool of economic actors willing to use cryptocurrency to deal with the Iranian state and entities. When Tehran took control over the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint through which approximately 20 percent of the world’s oil and LNG passes, it began demanding transit tolls from vessels navigating the strait.
The fees, typically starting at $1 per barrel, were payable in Bitcoin or renminbi, and reports have shown that a number of vessels and companies paid. Unlike stablecoins such as USDT, Bitcoin is fully decentralised and cannot be frozen by any issuer.
With approximately 175 million barrels currently loaded onto tankers in the Gulf, even partial toll collection could make considerable revenue if the strait reopens.
The use of renminbi is also significant. China is the biggest buyer of Iranian oil, and it pays in its own currency. But other countries have also started using the renminbi. In 2024, 30 percent of China’s external merchandise trade was paid for in its currency.
The toll mechanism is particularly significant in encouraging more companies to use the renminbi precisely because it has made the costs of dollar dependence impossible to ignore. Countries that have long endured the inconvenience of dollar-denominated trade are now facing its geopolitical risk in real time – watching the US weaponise the dollar access against allies and adversaries alike through secondary sanctions, waivers granted and suspended at will, and a blockade that disrupts global energy markets regardless of a country’s relationship with the US.
However, de-dollarisation via cryptocurrency and renminbi represents only one layer of the alternative financial architecture that the war is accelerating. Beneath the on-chain economy lies a more informal but equally significant set of mechanisms – hawala networks and barter arrangements – that the war and blockade may push further into the mainstream of regional and global trade.
Hawala is an informal transfer system that has existed for centuries. It operates through a network of brokers who enable payments in different locations without the physical movement of money. In the case of Iran, hawala works through trusted intermediaries – often shell companies established in various countries – that facilitate transactions on behalf of Iranian entities without directly linking deals to Iran, allowing for continued import and export activity.
The system produces shared benefits – commercial activity, transaction fees, employment, and demand for legal and logistics services – that give host countries a direct economic stake in its continuation. Beyond material advantage, these arrangements strengthen bilateral ties that host governments regard as strategically valuable amid mounting energy security concerns. Hawala, therefore, does not only help Iran evade sanctions – it quietly recruits regional economies as stakeholders in that evasion, embedding circumvention into the normal functioning of regional commerce.
The war is likely to enhance the appeal of already existing barter arrangements and attract a wider range of regional and global actors. In 2021, for example, Iran and Sri Lanka signed an agreement for the latter to repay its debt in the form of tea exports. A barter agreement also exists between Iran and Pakistan. India is now considering oil for rice swaps, and there is the potential for expanding exchanges of industrial goods with Russia. Each of these bypasses conventional banking channels, removing exposure to secondary sanctions and dollar-denominated settlement.
Most notably, Iran may now extend this model to the Strait of Hormuz itself, turning transit toll revenues into commodities traded across regional, Asian, and European markets and transforming a wartime chokepoint into a node within a broader barter-based alternative economy.
Nevertheless, dollar dominance is unlikely to unravel overnight. About 80 percent of global oil transactions remain dollar-settled, and the currency still makes up about 57 percent of global foreign exchange reserves – against just 2 percent for the renminbi, whose tight capital controls limit its convertibility and hinder its viability as a true reserve currency.
What the US-Israeli war is accelerating is not immediate substitution but gradual erosion – a slow-motion shift whose endpoint remains uncertain but whose direction is increasingly difficult to reverse.
Taken together, de-dollarisation, hawala networks, and barter arrangements divulge a structural paradox at the heart of the US-Israeli war strategy towards Iran. The war has generated an outcome its architects did not anticipate: Rather than dismantling Iran’s resistance infrastructure, it has internationalised it, expanding what analysts describe as an “axis of evasion”. If this trajectory is maintained, the long-term casualty may not be the Iranian state but the sanctions regime itself – and with it, the dollar’s hegemonic role as the tool of Western geopolitical imperialism.
Nonsense. This doesn't stop at cutting off the PRC's oil supply. Attrition works. We're not expecting to topple the communist regime with sanctions alone. This is just the beginning.
Your failed attack on Iran has demonstrated to all watching that US sanctions and military power projections are increasingly ineffective.
The world has changed.
The US empire is in decline.
Trump is struggling to deal with reality.
China won the trade war and Trump will go begging on his knees to Xi for renewed supply of rare earths because you have run out of Interceptors and the USS Gerald Ford aircraft carrier could now be sunk by a $7000 Shahed drone and any moment!
What failed attack? PRC's gas prices are going up. The attack is working fine.
You don't have any Interceptors left.
One wrong move and the USS Gerald Ford gets hit by a $7000 Shahed drone.
All aboard go down to feed the sharks!
The last vestiges of any credibility and viability for US imperialism will go down with it.
https://www.wsj.com/world/china/chinese-satellites-over-mideast-battlefield-put-u-s-on-edge-39e0d305
https://archive.ph/iNTTs
Iran is already done. Their water supply is completely dependent on Trump's mercy. Japan's navy hasn't even joined the game yet.
US budget airlines seek billions in aid amid soaring fuel costs
Their trade group is asking the Trump administration for $2.5bn to offset rising jet fuel costs and keep ticket prices affordable.
The Association of Value Airlines said smaller carriers are being hit hardest by the jump in fuel prices, despite carrying more than 90 million passengers last year.
“Temporary government support” would help “preserve vital industry competition”, the association said.
The trade group represents Frontier, Allegiant, Avelo and Sun Country. Another member, Spirit, is separately in talks with the US government on a potential financing deal aimed at keeping the struggling carrier flying as it navigates fuel price shocks during its second bankruptcy since 2024.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2026/4/28/iran-war-live-trump-reviews-peace-plan-un-calls-for-hormuz-to-reopen