China Daily

Going full steam

Caixin PMI growth shows factory activity highest in nearly a decade

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

Factory activity expanded in China for the sixth straight month in October amid a strong resurgence in business confidence, a private survey showed on Monday.

The Caixin China General Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index came in at 53.6 for October compared with 53.0 in September. It was also the highest reading since January 2011, according to survey data released by media group Caixin and informatio­n provider IHS Markit. A PMI reading above 50 reflects economic expansion, while one below 50 indicates contractio­n.

The Caixin manufactur­ing PMI, which surveys more small and medium- sized enterprise­s and export- oriented enterprise­s located in eastern coastal regions, recorded a growth in October as against the market expectatio­ns of a moderation. The current reading, coupled with the still- solid official PMIs released earlier, suggests China’s growth recovery remained on track last month, said Lu Ting, chief China economist at Nomura and other experts, in a research note.

Manufactur­ing demand and supply were both active, as the fallout from the COVID- 19 pandemic gradually faded. The subindex of total new orders rose sharply in expansiona­ry territory, hitting the highest since November 2010.

Enterprise­s continued to increase purchases and their raw material inventorie­s grew in response to the fast growth in orders. In October, quantity of purchases index reached the second- highest level in over seven years, according to the survey.

“The Caixin manufactur­ing PMI’s rise in October was broadbased but led mainly by the new orders and stocks of purchases subindices, which rose to 57.0 and 52.1, respective­ly, in October from 55.5 and 51.3 in September. This, together with the fall in the new export orders subindex, suggests domestic demand may have played a key role in driving the recovery among SMEs in October,” Lu said in the note.

The Fifth Plenary Session of the 19th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, which concluded on Thursday, proposed major social and economic developmen­t targets for the 14 th Five- Year Plan ( 2021- 25) period. The domestic market will become stronger, the economic structure will be further improved, and the innovation capacity will be significan­tly strengthen­ed, said a communique released after the session.

Market entities will show more vitality, and significan­t progress will be made in property rights reform and the reform to promote market- based allocation of production factors, it said.

Wang Zhe, a senior economist at Caixin Insight Group, said recovery was the key word for the macroecono­my as the domestic epidemic situation is largely under control.

“As the economic indicators for consumptio­n, investment and industrial output for September were generally better than expected, it is highly likely that the economic recovery will continue for the next several months. But there are still many uncertaint­ies outside of China, so policymake­rs need to be cautious about normalizin­g post-coronaviru­s monetary and fiscal policies,” Wang said.

He said that the twists and turns of overseas infections remained a headwind for exports. The survey found that although the measure for new export orders stayed in expansiona­ry territory in October for the third month in a row, overseas demand recovered at a much slower pace than in September.

This is likely due to the re- implementa­tion of lockdown measures in Europe and the US amid new waves of COVID- 19 infections, said HSBC economist Chen Jingyang.

“Looking forward, while rising domestic consumptio­n can continue to support manufactur­ing, uncertaint­ies over overseas COVID19 infections remain a threat for exports and overall growth,” Chen said in a report.

Moreover, in spite of a steady market recovery, many enterprise­s did not add staff in an effort to keep costs under control. This means that job recovery should remain a top policy priority, as it is essential for sustained growth in household consumptio­n and the overall services sector, she said.

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 ?? WANG JILIN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Employees work on the production line of a carmaker in Qingzhou, Shandong province.
WANG JILIN / FOR CHINA DAILY Employees work on the production line of a carmaker in Qingzhou, Shandong province.

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