The Jerusalem Post

China’s factory activity shrinks as US tariffs, slowdown hit orders

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BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s factory activity shrank more than expected in June, an official manufactur­ing survey showed, highlighti­ng the need for more economic stimulus as US tariffs and weaker domestic demand ramped up pressure on new orders for goods.

The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) stood at 49.4 in June, China’s National Bureau of Statistics said on Sunday, unchanged from the previous month and below the 50-point mark that separates growth from contractio­n on a monthly basis. Analysts polled by Reuters predicted a reading of 49.5.

The weak manufactur­ing readings are likely to cast a shadow over the apparent progress US and Chinese leaders made at the G20 summit in Japan over the weekend in restarting their troubled talks over tariffs amid a costly trade war.

They will also spark concerns about stalling growth in China and the risk of a global recession, despite slightly better-than-expected export and industrial profits data in May.

Many economists still expect the economy to face strong headwinds in coming months as domestic demand falters and external risks rise.

“Although the outcome of the G20 summit [in Osaka] might boost confidence for some entities, organic growth in the economy is still insufficie­nt, and counter-cyclical stimulus policies need to be maintained,” researcher­s at Huatai Securities wrote in a research note on Sunday.

“The PMI index continued to fall across the board this month, and only the raw material inventory sub-index was up due to weak demand,” the research note read.

In June, China’s factory output growth slowed, with the subindex falling to 51.3 from 51.7 in May while the contractio­n in total new orders accelerate­d to 49.6 from 49.8.

Export orders extended their decline with the sub-index falling to 46.3 from May’s 46.5, suggesting a further weakening in global demand.

Import orders also worsened, reflecting softening demand at home despite a flurry of growth-supporting measures rolled out earlier this year.

Southwest Securities said weak new export orders reflected a fading of the front-loading effect, which had temporaril­y boosted exports as Chinese companies rushed to place orders before more tariffs took effect.

US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping held ice-breaking talks at the G20 summit on Saturday. However, Chinese state media warned on Sunday that Beijing and Washington will likely face a long road before the two countries could reach a deal.

Analysts at Nomura expect any gains achieved on a temporary trade deal between China and the United States would prove fleeting with a renewed escalation likely further down the road.

Trump has already imposed tariffs on $250 billion of Chinese goods and is threatenin­g to extend those to another $300b., which would effectivel­y cover all of China’s exports to the United States. China has retaliated with tariffs on US imports.

To deal with the economic challenges, policy-makers have released a range of measures and are expected to launch more. Chinese Premier Li Keqiang last week pledged to cut real interest rates on financing for small and micro firms.

Goldman Sachs said the lack of any substantiv­e progress in Sino-US trade talks at the G20 over the weekend suggested stimulus, including cuts to banks’ reserve requiremen­ts, was likely to be needed.

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