Investing

2026 – the Year of the Horse and China’s two-speed system

18 February 2026
4 minutes

At a glance

  • Chinese New Year 2026 is Year of the Horse
  • SJP has put together some charts and comments on key domestic indicators
  • These reflect some strengths and challenges for the world’s second largest economy.
     

Chinese New Year, the most significant annual holiday for the approximately 1.5 billion Chinese worldwide, began this week. Also known as Lunar New Year, it follows the phases of the moon. In contrast, the western calendar tracks the orbit of the sun. This is why the date varies year to year but usually falls between 21 January – 20 February.

Chinese New Year follows a 12-year cycle with each year associated with a particular animal. 2026 is the Year of the Horse. This is associated with people born in 1966, 1978, 1990, 2002 and 2026.

People born during the Year of the Horse are identified with the following characteristics:  

Strengths: Generous, good communicators, friendly with a positive attitude.

Weaknesses: Love to spend but not so good at saving. They can’t keep secrets and may be vain.  

Relationships: Sentimental and emotional but with realistic attitudes towards relationships. Best matches are with people born in the year of the Tiger, Sheep or Rabbit. Bad matches are with a Rat, Ox or Rooster.

Life and career: Often rebellious in their youth, Horse personalities often thrive, helped by their outgoing character. Prefer giving orders to obeying them.

To mark the Year of the Horse, we have selected some charts reflecting various aspects of China’s economy.

Gold holdings accelerated post 20221

SJP Approved 18/02/2026