Business Day

China business confidence a boost for factories

- Liangping Gao and Ryan Woo

China’s manufactur­ing activity expanded at the fastest pace in 13 months in March, with business confidence hitting an 11-month high, driven by growing new orders from customers at home and abroad, a private survey showed on Monday.

The Caixin/S&P Global manufactur­ing PMI rose to 51.1 in March from 50.9 the previous month, above analysts’ forecasts of 51 and marking an expansion for the fifth consecutiv­e month. The 50-point mark separates growth from contractio­n.

The upbeat results followed recent better-than-expected export and retail sales data, suggesting a bright start to the year for the world’s second-biggest economy.

Citi last week raised its forecast for China’s 2024 growth to 5% from 4.6%, citing “recent positive data and policy delivery”.

Premier Li Qiang announced an ambitious 2024 economic growth target of about 5% at the annual meeting of China’s parliament in March.

THE CAIXIN/S&P GLOBAL MANUFACTUR­ING PMI ROSE TO 51.1 IN MARCH FROM 50.9 THE PREVIOUS MONTH, ABOVE ANALYSTS’ FORECASTS OF 51

But analysts say policymake­rs will need to roll out more stimulus to hit that target as they will be unable to count on the weak statistica­l base of 2022 that flattered 2023 growth data. Moreover, a deep slump in the property sector remains a major drag on activity.

Expansion in manufactur­ers’ output and new orders accelerate­d in March, the PMI survey showed.

External demand also picked up, pushing the gauge for new export orders to its highest level since February 2023.

Businesses’ confidence towards the year ahead rose to its highest point since April 2023 on good news such as a reduction in input costs.

“A drop in raw material prices reduced production costs for manufactur­ers, providing leeway for them to lower prices amid fierce market competitio­n,” said Wang Zhe, senior economist at Caixin Insight Group.

However, companies were cautious about adding employees, and the relevant subindex has remained negative since August in 2023.

“The economy still faces headwinds with prevalent uncertaint­ies and unfavourab­le factors,” Wang said.

“Downward economic pressures persist, employment remains subdued, prices remain low, and insufficie­nt effective demand has not been fundamenta­lly resolved, underscori­ng the need to further boost domestic and external demand,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa