Shanghai Daily

Manufactur­ing growth cools, outlook subdued

- Huang Yixuan PMI

CHINA’S manufactur­ing activity cooled in July to grow at the slowest pace for eight months, with output and new business both expanding at softer rates, according to a report released yesterday.

The Caixin China General Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index dipped 0.2 points to 50.8 last month from June, according to the survey focusing on the private sector by financial informatio­n service provider Markit for Caixin Media.

A reading above 50 signals growth; below 50 is a contractio­n.

The trend echoed the decline in the official PMI released by the National Bureau of Statistics on Tuesday which fell by 0.3 points to 51.2 in July from a month earlier.

That was the slowest growth since November 2017.

“Optimism towards the year ahead remained relatively subdued amid concerns surroundin­g tough market conditions, strict environmen­tal policies and the potential impact of the US-China trade war,” the report said.

New order growth weakened for the second month running and was slower than the historical series trend.

Data suggested that reduced external demand contribute­d to the slowdown, as exports fell for the fourth month in a row, the report said.

Notably, new export orders fell at the steepest pace for 25 months in July.

Manufactur­ing sector employment continued to fall in July, with some companies downsizing.

The further reduction in staffing levels and the rise in new orders contribute­d to a sustained increase in backlogs of work, though the rate of accumulati­on slipped to the weakest for five months.

The report also noted that buying activity among producers increased again at the start of the third quarter, while the pace of expansion was the weakest recorded in just over a year.

Stocks of inputs were meanwhile little-changed from the previous month, while inventorie­s of finished items declined for the third month in a row.

“The sub-index for stocks of finished items contracted at a steeper rate in July, while the sub-index for stocks of purchased items started expanding again — a positive sign that companies had reduced their stocks of finished products and replenishe­d stocks of purchases,” said Zhong Zhengsheng, director of macroecono­mic analysis at CEBM Group.

Average input costs rose solidly in July, despite inflation softening since June. Companies linked higher cost burdens to higher raw material prices, the report said.

Meanwhile, factory gate prices increased at only a modest pace that was the slowest recorded for three months.

“In general, the survey signaled a weakening manufactur­ing trend as a grim export market dragged on the sector’s performanc­e,” Zhong said. “The positive drivers were the increase in stocks of purchases and easing pressure on capital turnover.”

Nomura also expected the manufactur­ing PMI to decline further in coming months.

“Despite monetary easing and the announced fiscal stimulus, we still see strong headwinds and expect the economic growth to weaken further before staging a moderate rebound,” said Lu Ting, Nomura’s chief economist for China.

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