The uptick marks the first time in three months that the pace of new order growth has accelerated, according to the report. Analysts attribute the momentum to a combination of new product launches and a recovery in export demand. Yao Yu, founder of RatingDog, noted that the service sector entered the year on a stable footing, though the outlook for February remains split between a holiday-driven consumption boom and a seasonal lull in producer services.
Diverging Economic Signals
The private data stands in sharp contrast to China’s official nonmanufacturing PMI, which fell to 49.4 in January, dipping below the 50-point mark that separates expansion from contraction. This discrepancy was also mirrored in manufacturing data; while official factory activity unexpectedly contracted, the RatingDog manufacturing gauge climbed to 50.3 at the start of 2026. This divergence is largely attributed to the surveys' differing focus, with S&P Global’s RatingDog index tracking smaller, export-sensitive private firms rather than state-owned entities.
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