Business World

China’s economy accelerate­s as retail picks up

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China’s economy accelerate­d for a secondstra­ight quarter as investment picked up, retail sales rebounded and factory output accelerate­d amid robust credit growth and further strength in property markets. Gross domestic product increased 6.9% in the first quarter from a year earlier, compared with a 6.8% median estimate in a Bloomberg survey.

CHINA’S ECONOMY accelerate­d for a second-straight quarter as investment picked up, retail sales rebounded and factory output accelerate­d amid robust credit growth and further strength in property markets.

Gross domestic product (GDP) increased 6.9% in the first quarter from a year earlier, compared with a 6.8% median estimate in a Bloomberg survey.

Other indicators released Monday by the National Bureau of Statistics showed:

Fixed- asset investment excluding rural areas expanded 9.2% for the first three months, accelerati­ng from 8.1% growth last year;

Retail sales increased 10.9% from a year earlier in March, compared with a median estimate of 9.7% in a Bloomberg survey;

Industrial output rose 7.6% last month from a year earlier, compared with an estimated 6.3% rise.

“For the first time in the recent years, China starts a year with a strong headline GDP,” said Raymond Yeung, chief greater China economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Hong Kong, who correctly forecast the growth pace. “Thanks to strong investment and property, the economy is performing well.”

The expansion further cements a rebound as producer prices surge, industrial output picks up and surging credit fuels investment. Policy makers have shifted to a more neutral monetary stance as they seek to ease financial risk and reduce excess industrial capacity.

“The first quarter growth is mainly driven by reflation and very strong property sales and investment,” said Larry Hu, head of China economics at Macquarie Securities Ltd. in Hong Kong. “This strong data would give more confidence to maintain a tightening stance.”

The broadest measure of new credit rose more than estimated last month amid strong growth in shadow banking. Aggregate financing grew 2.12 trillion yuan ($308 billion).

NOMINAL SURGE

In current-price terms, the economy expanded 11.8% from a year earlier, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce estimates.

“That’s making the problem of excess leverage look a little more manageable — at least as long as factory reflation stays strong,” BI economists Tom Orlik and Fielding Chen wrote in a report.

The labor market has been holding up too: The surveyed jobless rate fell in March from February, while the level in big cities was below 5% at end of last month, the NBS said. China added 3.34 million new jobs in the first quarter.

Other data pointed to further rebalancin­g away from the old industrial growth drivers. Consumptio­n contribute­d 77.2% to growth in the first quarter, an NBS spokesman said at a briefing in Beijing. Last year, 64.6% of growth came from consumptio­n.

“The rebound in retail sales growth was particular­ly important as it indicates that consumer spending remains strong,” said Rajiv Biswas, Asia Pacific chief economist at IHS Markit in Singapore. “The upturn in Chinese growth is a very positive indicator for the Asia Pacific and world growth in 2017, as well as underpinni­ng the near- term outlook for global commoditie­s.”

INVESTMENT MOMENTUM

Despite recent property tightening measures, investment momentum is likely to stay strong in coming months amid heavy infrastruc­ture investment. The April 1 announceme­nt of the new Xiongan economic zone portends massive constructi­on spending and suggests authoritie­s are likely to remain reliant on investment to help support longer-term growth.

Investment in property developmen­t rose 9.1% in the first three months from a year earlier, compared with 8.9% in the first two months and 6.9% in 2016. Yet developers may find 2017 more challengin­g, as about a dozen cities have imposed tighter restrictio­ns on purchases to curb a frenzy of speculatio­n.

“Growth remained strong on the back of continued strength in housing activity, resilient infrastruc­ture investment, and better external demand,” said Robin Xing, chief China economist at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong. “The strong growth and better external demand has provided room for a faster pace of countercyc­lical monetary policy tightening.”

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? CHINA’S gross domestic product increased 6.9% in the first quarter.
BLOOMBERG CHINA’S gross domestic product increased 6.9% in the first quarter.

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