New Straits Times

‘CHINA COOLING FURTHER’

More stimulus plans likely as fixed-asset investment, industrial output underperfo­rm

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CHINA’S economy is showing signs of cooling further as the United States prepares even tougher trade tariffs, with investment growth slowing to a record low and consumers turning more cautious about spending, data showed yesterday.

Fixed-asset investment expanded by a less-than-expected 5.5 per cent in January-July, a result of Beijing’s crackdown on lavish local government borrowing for projects to boost growth.

Industrial output also undershot expectatio­ns, weighed down by pollution curbs and the uncertain trade outlook, adding to expectatio­ns that authoritie­s would roll out more policy stimulus measures.

With the trade war threatenin­g more pressure on China’s already slowing economy, Beijing has shifted its focus to boosting domestic demand and is taking a more measured approach in its campaign to reduce financial risks and debt, which has pushed up borrowing costs and triggered a rising number of defaults.

The government has pledged to ramp up spending on railways and roads “its traditiona­l ‘go-to’ approach when the economy slows” while the central bank is pumping more money into the system and urging banks to offer more loans at cheaper rates to small businesses.

New yuan loans exceeded expectatio­ns last month, statistics showed on Monday, in one of the few bright spots in the most recent data.

With the economy shifting into lower gear even without a trade shock, Capital Economics has predicted China’s central bank will soon cut its official lending rate for the first time since 2015, though most analysts predict a more modest but steady stream of support measures in coming months.

The Shanghai “Nifty 50” stock index fell about 0.8 per cent after the disappoint­ing data, which added to a sour mood in global financial markets.

The pace of fixed-asset investment was the weakest on record going back to early 1996, according to data on Reuters Eikon. Investment had been expected to grow six per cent in the first seven months of the year, steady from January-June.

For last month, fixed-asset investment grew three per cent from a year earlier.

 ?? EPA PIC ?? Capital Economics has predicted China’s central bank will cut its official lending rate for the first time since 2015 as the economy is shifting into lower gear even without a trade shock.
EPA PIC Capital Economics has predicted China’s central bank will cut its official lending rate for the first time since 2015 as the economy is shifting into lower gear even without a trade shock.

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