New Straits Times

CHINA’S Q3 GDP GROWTH SLOWS TO 6PC

Economy grappling with both external, internal headwinds, says HSBC

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CHINA continued its grind to more moderate growth in the third quarter as investment slowed, providing little upside for a global economy flirting with its first recession since 2009.

Gross domestic product rose six per cent in the July-September period from a year ago, the slowest pace since the early 1990s and weaker than the consensus forecast of 6.1 per cent. On the upside, factory output improved and retail sales held up, but slowing investment growth remained a concern.

Policymake­rs appear to be allowing the world’s second-largest economy to drift lower as they seek to clean up the financial system and curb excessive credit growth while they fight a confidence-sapping trade war with United States President Donald Trump.

With a drop-off in exports to the US expected to continue as long as tariffs remain, the economy is likely to keep struggling as falling factory prices hit company profits and rising consumer inflation hits spending power.

Even with the slowdown, yearto-date growth of 6.2 per cent suggests the government can hit its target of an expansion of 6.0 to 6.5 per cent for this year. Until now, officials have focused on limited, targeted measures such as reserve-ratio cuts and credit support, wary of expanding the nation’s already heavy debt load. A meeting of the Communist Party’s top leadership due in the coming days may present an opportunit­y to review stimulus settings.

“China’s economy is grappling with both external and internal headwinds,” said Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian economics research at HSBC Holdings Plc in Hong Kong.

“Exports started to contract of late amid wobbly global demand and rising tariffs in the US Despite some stabilisat­ion in retail sales and industrial production last month, overall demand continues to soften, reflecting still relatively tight credit conditions.”

Nominal growth, which is unadjusted for inflation, slowed to 7.6 per cent from a year earlier, according to Bloomberg calculatio­ns. That’s the slowest since the third quarter of 2016.

The nominal growth rate “tends to capture the cycles in the economy better”, according to a research note from Trivium China. It also gives a better idea of whether growth is fast enough to repay the nation’s growing debt, as lending is denominate­d in nominal values and isn’t adjusted for inflation.

The slowing nominal rate indicates that the deflator, a reading of inflation across the economy, dipped to 1.6 per cent.

As China slows, it is buying less from the rest of the world, pushing its trade surplus higher and dragging on global economic growth. That’s having a knock-on effect on trade partners, from developed economies like Germany to commodity suppliers.

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