China Daily (Hong Kong)

Mild inflation offers room for risk control

The pick-up in Consumer Price Index is unlikely to sustain, analysts say

-

BEIJING — China’s inflation accelerate­d faster than expected in August, but remained mild overall, leaving policymake­rs room for containing financial leverage and risks.

Fresh data showed on Sept 9 that the Consumer Price Index or CPI, a main gauge of inflation, rose to a seven-month high of 1.8 percent in August, compared with July’s 1.4 percent, beating market expectatio­ns of 1.6 percent.

For the first eight months of the year, the CPI climbed 1.5 percent from one year earlier, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics.

The core consumer inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, increased 2.2 percent year-onyear in August, up slightly from July’s 2.1 percent. The core CPI has been holding steady at a little above 2 percent since March.

The stronger, yet still moderate, consumer inflation remained below the government’s annual target of around 3 percent set for 2017.

The Producer Price Index or PPI, which measures costs of goods at the factory gate, climbed to a four-month high of 6.3 percent in August, compared with 5.5 percent in July, according to the NBS.

PPI growth, which was higher than the market forecast of 5.7 percent, was boosted by increases in the prices of steel, non-ferrous metals, as well as oil and natural gas.

Analysts said the pick-up in inflation is unlikely to continue because of a high comparativ­e base in September 2016 and the fading effects of seasonal factors during the rest of the year.

Jiang Chao, chief economist at Haitong Securities, said the CPI increase would ease to 1.6 percent in September and remain subdued for the whole year.

Prices of coal, steel and other metals continued to rise in September amid the government’s efforts to reduce industrial overcapaci­ty and enhance environmen­tal regulation­s, but Jiang expected September’s PPI growth to fall to 5.8 percent due to a calculatio­n factor in higher prices for the same month last year.

Guosen Securities analyst Dong Dezhi said the growth of the CPI and the PPI in August would be their peak this year.

August’s price data added to a slew of upside surprises in the world’s second-largest economy, which has defied market expectatio­ns of a slowdown.

Producer prices accelerate­d upward, a significan­t positive sign for China’s economy, which will help drive profits higher and enable companies to process their debt burden a little more easily, said Tom Orlik, Bloomberg’s chief Asia economist.

With downward pressure and increasing global market uncertaint­y complicati­ng the outlook, analysts said the mild inflation and steady growth momentum would give policymake­rs more scope to continue deleveragi­ng.

The government’s ongoing drive to contain financial risks will see credit growth slowing further in the coming months, including credit flows to local government­s, which may soften fixed-asset investment and weigh on economic activity, said Wang Tao, UBS economist.

 ?? WANG BIAO / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A customer selects fruits at a supermarke­t in Fuyang, Anhui province.
WANG BIAO / FOR CHINA DAILY A customer selects fruits at a supermarke­t in Fuyang, Anhui province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China