China Daily (Hong Kong)

BUILDING A RECOVERY

Manufactur­ing springs back faster than expected

- By CHEN JIA chenjia1@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese manufactur­ing sprang back in August at a faster- than- expected speed, indicated by a four-month high in the HSBC Holdings Purchasing Managers’ Index. The developmen­t is expected to lead a rebound for other emerging economies in the coming months, according to the British bank.

The preliminar­y reading of the manufactur­ing PMI rose to 50.1 in August from 47.7 in July, ending a three-month consecutiv­e contractio­n since May, the bank said on Thursday.

The HSBC PMI was 48.2 in June. A PMI reading above 50 means business expansion in the industry.

China’s strengthen­ed manufactur­ing sector was in line with the recent obvious improvemen­t in factory production in the United States and the eurozone, which together are expected to pull emerging markets out of slowing growth, economists said.

Since July, the manufactur­ing sectors in the US and the eurozone have showed an upward trend. The PMI reading was 55.4 in the US in July, up from 50.9 in June. In the eurozone, it climbed to 51.3 in August, compared with 50.3 in July, signaling that the world’s major economies are firmly on the road to recovery.

Zhang Zhiwei, chief economist with Nomura Securities Co Ltd, said China’s August PMI confirms that its economy has stabilized in the short term and downside risks for the second half have declined.

In August, a PMI sub-index that indicates factories’ output rose to 50.6 from 48 in July, the highest level in three months. The new order sub-indicator rose to 50.5, 3.9 points higher than that in July, the highest since April, according to HSBC.

“China’s manufactur­ing growth has started to stabilize on the back of modest improvemen­ts in new business and output,” said Qu Hongbin, chief economist in China with HSBC.

This improvemen­t is consistent with headline activity indicators such as industrial production in July.

The National Bureau of Statistics showed a 9.7 percent year-on-year growth of industrial output in July, the highest level in five months.

“The August growth was mainly driven by the initial filtering through of recent fine- tuning measures and companies’ restocking activities, despite continued external weakness,” Qu said.

Zhu Haibin, chief economist in China with JPMorgan Chase and Co, does not expect any major significan­t stimulus measures because of the rebounding manufactur­ing sector.

“The government appears keen to selectivel­y support infrastruc­ture investment, including railways, urban basic facilities, as well as environmen­tal and energy conservati­on industries, hinting at solid public sector fixed-asset investment growth in the coming months,” Zhu said.

However, Standard Chartered Plc’s chief Chinese economist Stephen Green expected only “a very gradual and fragile” recovery in the Chinese industrial sector in the coming months, based on his bank’s prediction model covering new orders and finished-goods inventorie­s.

“We expect the official and the HSBC PMIs to continue to hover between 50 and 53 in the coming months, with no dramatic improvemen­t,” he said.

The National Bureau of Statistics will release the official August PMI data on Sept 1. It focuses more on indicating the manufactur­ing situation of large and State-owned enterprise­s.

 ?? LI ZONGXIAN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Activity in China’s manufactur­ing sector rebounded strongly this month, and major economic indicators released in recent weeks all point to a stabilizat­ion of the economy.
LI ZONGXIAN / FOR CHINA DAILY Activity in China’s manufactur­ing sector rebounded strongly this month, and major economic indicators released in recent weeks all point to a stabilizat­ion of the economy.

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