Goldman Sachs believes the easing measures that China may resort to are unlikely to fully offset the hit due to tariffs.
In quarterly terms, the economy grew 5.4% in October-December, the government reported Friday.
Howard Marks has pointed out the diminishing returns of such stimulus-related interventions, adding that one can't grow through stimulus 'perpetually'.
For a while now oil prices have mostly stayed below $90 a barrel thanks to subdued economic data from China, given that weak domestic demand lowers Beijing’s gigantic requirement for crude. And this to an extent compensated for the impact of tensions in the Middle East.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.2%, a smaller decline than the 0.4% fall earlier in the session.
Here are the key economic events in India and from around the world to get you started for next week.
The investment bank lowered its projection for gross domestic product growth from 3.3% seen earlier, as it cut the third- and fourth-quarter estimates.
Underlying weakness in Chinese data, irrespective of COVID/lockdown is a key watch
The growth figures may not fully capture the shockwaves of the Covid lockdowns across several cities which also were economic centres, including Shanghai.
Separate data on March activity, especially retail sales, is likely to show an even sharper slowdown, analysts say, hit hard by China's strict efforts to contain its biggest COVID outbreak.
S&P Global Ratings have kept their growth forecast for India unchanged at 9.5 percent while ICRA has updated its forecast from the earlier 8.5 percent to 9 percent.
The slowing economy makes it more difficult for China to negotiate with the US amid the ongoing trade war.
China's GDP growth of 6.4 percent in Q1 CY19 is a shade better than consensus, Moneycontrol's Sakshi Batra does a 3-Point Analysis on what the data suggests.
Forex - Aussie weaker ahead of RBA stability review, China GDP
Shares of Tata Steel and Hindalco Industries rallied more than 2 percent after better than expected China GDP data. The world's second largest economy grew 7.3 percent in the fourth quarter of last year against forecasts of 7.2 percent.
Global cues, meanwhile are positive with the Asian market treading mixed in early morning trade as investors await data from China for further trading cues. China's Q4 GDP was expected to grow by 7.2 percent but came in at 7.3 percent.
Karvy has come out with its technical recommendations on currencies. According to the research firm USDINR October may trade in a range of 61.18-61.67
Industrial output data will be followed by the more important December consumer and wholesale inflation data in the week starting Monday, January 13, amid widespread expectations food prices have substantially eased last month.
Dani Commodities has come out with its report on commodities. According to the research firm, one can buy MCX Copper at Rs 440.50 for the target of Rs 442.50 with a stop-loss of Rs 439.
In Q2, China's GDP grew at the slowest pace in the last 3 years, but still met expectations. Mark Williams, chief Asia economist, Capital Economics talks about how he sees the Chinese economy shaping up for the rest of this year.
The downturn in the euro zone's private sector is becoming entrenched and Chinese factories are finding the going increasingly tough, business surveys showed on Thursday, painting a darker outlook for the world economy.
Overall inflation may have moderated in April, but food prices are still high in China, which could dampen spending and put the country's new consumption-led growth plan at risk, experts tell CNBC.
Here is a look at the top global headlines and dometic newsmakers that will determine if the Nifty will hold on to the 5200 level today.
The Chinese government has vowed to fine-tune the economy which continued on the declining trend, registering 8.1% GDP growth in January-March this year, the lowest quarterly rise in nearly three years.
Gold edged lower on Friday after weaker-than-expected first-quarter growth data from China prompted a modest rise in the dollar, but losses were capped as the slower growth fueled prospects for further monetary easing.