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Industrial output rises 6.3%

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BEIJING: China issued a raft of upbeat data on Tuesday showing the economy got off to a strong start in 2017, supported by strong bank lending, a government infrastruc­ture spree and a much-needed resurgence in private investment.

Solid growth is welcome news for China’s policymake­rs as they turn their focus to containing risks from a sharp build-up in debt ahead of a major leadership reshuffle later this year.

But economists are not sure how long the pace can be sustained as the central bank takes a tighter stance on credit and exporters brace for a surge in US protection­ism.

Fixed-asset investment expanded more strongly than expected in the first two months of the year as growth in private investment more than doubled from 2016, while surging demand for steel for new roads, bridges and homes lifted factory output.

That added to readings last week showing robust imports, particular­ly of commoditie­s such as iron ore, and a sharp rise in producer prices which is boosting industrial profits.

“Today’s data appeared to be mainly driven by infrastruc­ture spending and a rebound in the real estate sector,” said Zhou Hao, a Singapore-based economist at Commerzban­k.

China has cut its growth target to around 6.5 percent this year to give policymake­rs more room to push through painful reforms to reduce financial risks created by years of debt-fueled stimulus. The world’s second-largest economy grew 6.7 percent last year, the slowest pace in 26 years.

China’s first-quarter economic growth could accelerate to 7 per- cent year-on-year, from 6.8 percent in the last quarter, economists at Oversea- Chinese Banking Corporatio­n (OCBC) wrote in a note last week.

But OCBC and many other China watchers expect that pace will begin to slow starting in spring as the payoff from last year’s stimulus spree begins to fade.

“This strength remains heavily reliant on rapid investment growth that will be difficult to sustain given clear signals that the fiscal and monetary policy stance will be less supportive this year,” says Julian Evans- Pritchard, a Singapore-based China economist at Capital Economics.

China’s new loans fell sharply in February from near-record levels the previous month but were still higher than expected.

ANZ said the rapid credit expansion might trigger further hikes in short-term interest rates, following too early this year, as policymake­rs remain concerned about high leverage in the economy.

Analysts singled out an unexpected­ly strong rebound in investment as particular­ly encouragin­g for China’s outlook.

Fixed-asset investment growth accelerate­d to 8.9 percent in January and February from the same period last year, largely due to strong property and infrastruc­ture constructi­on.

Economists had expected investment growth of 8.2 percent, quickening from 8.1 percent in the whole of 2016. Growth in private investment quickened to 6.7 percent, more than twice the pace of last year, suggesting private firms are growing more optimistic about the business outlook.

Sheng Laiyun, a spokespers­on for the statistics bureau, attributed the rebound largely to better implementa­tion of Public-Private Partnershi­p (PPP) projects, which the government has been pushing to attract more private capital into traditiona­lly state-dominated areas.

Private investment had cooled sharply last year, with many smaller firms facing tough access to financing, tight profit margins and a crowding out by big state companies. Private investment accounts for about 60 percent of overall investment in China.

Industrial output rose 6.3 per- cent, slightly more than expected and the best pace in nearly a year.

China’s steel mills are churning out as much metal as possible, enjoying their best profits in years, even as they worry that a year-long rally in prices is running out of steam, executives said.

China combines January and February activity data in a bid to smooth out seasonal distortion­s caused by the timing of the long Lunar New Year holidays, which began in late January this year but fell in February last year.

While activity data suggested generally resilient growth, analysts pointed out two potential areas of concern.

Real estate data was mixed, with some hints that the sector may be showing signs of heating up again, despite a slew of government curbs since October to tame sharp home price rises.

China’s property sales by area surged 25.1 percent in the first two months from a year ago, well above the annual rate last year, which was the fastest in seven years. It was also a marked surge from December.

Real estate investment growth moderated but only slightly, to 8.9 percent from 11.1 percent in December, according to Reuters’ calculatio­ns. It rose 6.9 percent in all of 2016.

A rebound in the sector could risk another round of cooling measures, which could drag on broader growth. Retail sales also disappoint­ed. Sales grew 9.5 percent in the first two months of the year, the slowest pace in nearly two years and cooling from 10.9 percent in December.

But the statistics bureau’s Sheng told reporters “there is no problem with consumptio­n in China,” stressing weaker growth is mainly due to a slowdown in auto sales after the government rolled back tax breaks on small cars.

 ??  ?? Solid growth is welcome news for China’s policymake­rs as they turn their focus to containing risks from a sharp build-up in debt ahead of a major leadership reshuffle later this year. (Reuters)
Solid growth is welcome news for China’s policymake­rs as they turn their focus to containing risks from a sharp build-up in debt ahead of a major leadership reshuffle later this year. (Reuters)

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