Arab Times

China Sept factory surveys show flickers of improvemen­t but ‘outlook’ still weak

New orders swing back to growth, production quickens

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BEIJING, Sept 30, (RTRS): Factory activity surveys in China pointed to slight improvemen­t in September as domestic demand picked up, but analysts believe the gains will be short-lived as the property market cools and Sino-US trade tensions remain elevated.

Persistent weakness in China’s vast manufactur­ing sector has reinforced market expectatio­ns that Beijing needs to roll out more support measures to cushion the country’s worst economic slowdown in decades, even if that risks racking up more debt.

The official Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose to 49.8 in September, slightly better than expected and advancing from 49.5 in August. But it remained below the 50-point mark that separates expansion from contractio­n on a monthly basis, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed.

Analysts polled by Reuters had expected the headline reading would be unchanged.

A private business survey also released on Monday showed growth in factory activity unexpected­ly quickened to a 19-month high of 51.4 in September, largely due to a rise in domestic orders as government support measures kicked in.

But economists cautioned the rebound is likely be unsustaina­ble, and forecast further economic weakness ahead.

“We believe the official manufactur­ing PMI may decline again,

the growth slowdown could gather pace and (financial) markets could become more volatile in coming months,” economists at Nomura said in a note.

Nomura recently lowered its third-quarter growth forecast for China to 5.9% and its fourth-quarter view to 5.8%, slowing from the 6.2% reported in the second quarter. It cited continued US tariff pressure, slowing industrial production and signs that property investment and constructi­on may be starting to cool.

Total new orders, including those from home and abroad, did swing back to growth in September for the first time in five months, the official PMI showed, but the expansion was marginal.

Moreover, export demand remained weak, with orders falling for the 16th straight month, albeit at a milder pace.

Production rose at a quicker pace in September, buoyed by the growth in new orders. In particular, output in the food processing,

textile, special equipment and electrical machinery sectors stood at high levels, Zhao Qinghe, an official with the statistics bureau said in a statement accompanyi­ng the data. “With a slew of growthboos­ting policy measures kicking in, optimism among manufactur­ing firms... reached 54.4, the highest in the third quarter,” said Zhao.

The activity surveys followed unexpected­ly weak August data which showed growth in industrial production tumbled to its weakest level in 17-1/2 years, while factory deflation deepened. Winter smog controls are expected to keep a lid on heavy industries in some parts of the country in coming months.

“While China’s fiscal stance is unlikely to be loosened during the remainder of the year, we think the PBOC will find it an increasing­ly hard sell to refrain from more decisive monetary easing,” Martin Lynge Rasmussen, China Economist at Capital Economics said in a note, adding the better PMIs were likely a false dawn.

The Peoples’ Bank of China has lowered banks’ reserve requiremen­ts seven times since early 2018 to free up more funds for lending. China also trimmed its new benchmark lending rate in September for the second month in a row.

But analysts note monetary policy easing has been more cautious than in past downturns, likely due to concerns about rising debt and financial risks, particular­ly involving the property market.

Export-oriented manufactur­ers are particular­ly vulnerable as the nearly 15-month Sino-US trade war shows no signs of ending.

Top-level trade negotiator­s from the two sides are expected to meet in Washington on Oct.10-11 to determine if they can agree a truce in their trade war, but most analysts doubt a durable agreement can be reached.

Higher US tariffs on Chinese goods are due to take effect in mid-October and mid-December, and sources told Reuters the

Trump administra­tion is considerin­g radical new pressure tactics on Beijing, including the possibilit­y of delisting Chinese companies from US stock exchanges.

With business uncertaint­ies clouding the outlook, the official survey showed Chinese factories continued to cut jobs in September. The employment sub-index was at 47.0 versus 46.9 in August.

A separate survey showed services sector activity remained well in expansiona­ry territory, but constructi­on growth eased, with a sub-reading for constructi­on activity standing at 57.6, down from 61.2 in August. Beijing recently tightened financing for property developers. The non-manufactur­ing PMI in September was at 53.7, slightly down from August’s 53.8.

Beijing is counting on a strong services sector to cushion the impact from trade uncertaint­ies and factory job losses. But the sector began showing signs of cooling late last year amid the broader economic slowdown.

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