Shanghai Daily

Caixin PMI moves up in February

- Song Yingge PMI

CHINA’S manufactur­ing sector rose modestly in February to a nine-month high, bolstered by firmer client demand and increasing prices, according to a private survey released by Caixin yesterday.

The Caixin China General Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index, an indicator of manufactur­ing activity, climbed to 51.6 in February from 51.5 in January, notching a peak since August last year, the survey conducted by financial informatio­n service provider Markit and sponsored by Caixin Media Co showed.

The index showed continuous improvemen­t in business conditions across China’s manufactur­ing sector, pushing it further above the 50-point threshold separating expansion from contractio­n.

“This suggests that the durability of China’s economy will persist,” said Zhong Zhengsheng, director of macroecono­mic analysis at CEBM Group, a subsidiary of Caixin Insight Group.

The increase was backed by increases in output and prices, with output across the manufactur­ing sector rising at a modest rate due to growing new orders amid firmer client demand, the survey showed.

Total new orders placed with Chinese manufactur­ers grew slightly faster from January, led by consumer and intermedia­te goods sectors.

That may suggest an upbeat outlook for China’s economic growth, as demand generated at the beginning of the year would set the direction for the whole year, Zhong added.

Meanwhile, output prices in the sector rose for nine straight months by February, “driven by higher costs caused by more costly raw materials, especially steel, copper and chemicals”, the survey showed.

The survey results came a day after the official manufactur­ing Purchasing Manager’s Index — which fell to 50.3 from January’s 51.3 — was published by the National Bureau of Statistics. The private survey compiles more data from light industry and private companies, while the official survey focuses more on larger and state-owned firms.

While the larger state-owned firms posted the sharpest drop over six years due to suspension of work during the Chinese New Year holiday, private businesses kept bolstering the economy, with companies making active preparatio­ns to start work in March, Zhong said.

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