Bangkok Post

China’s PMI picks up in June

Gradual recovery remains on track

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BEIJING: A gauge of China’s manufactur­ing activity climbed in June, signaling the country’s gradual recovery from the coronaviru­s slump remains on track.

The official manufactur­ing purchasing managers’ index rose to 50.9 from 50.6 a month earlier, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics yesterday. The non-manufactur­ing gauge rose to 54.4.

The 50-point mark separates expansion from contractio­n on a monthly basis.

The data confirm the trend of a gradual domestic recovery from the historic contractio­n in the first quarter and back up the government’s relatively modest stance on policy stimulus. But with the coronaviru­s hitting global demand and continued outbreaks of the virus not ruled out, the rebound may prove hard to sustain.

A sub-index of new export orders climbed to 42.6, while manufactur­ing employment fell to 49.1 and the nonfactory job index rose to 48.7.

“The data show that manufactur­ing is still leading the recovery in China,’’ said Zhou Hao, senior emerging markets economist at Commerzban­k AG in Singapore.

“China’s GDP growth is very likely to turn positive in the second quarter. However, the job data remain a concern as both job indices are below 50, suggesting that the demand recovery still lags behind.”

While parts of the economy have recovered from the virus shutdowns, there’s an apparent divergence between demand and supply — factories and companies have returned and output is growing again, but exports and domestic retail sales are shrinking.

“The data underline stabilisat­ion in an economy that’s still hampered by an uneven recovery across different sectors. The upshot — policy accommodat­ion will probably be in place for a long time, though the pace of easing might slow,” Chang Shu and David Qu, economists at Bloomberg Economics, said.

“Almost 55% of firms said demand was inadequate, the fourth straight month more than half of firms have said that,’’ Wen Tao, an analyst at the China Logistics Informatio­n Center, which helps compile the data, wrote in a report on its website.

“The new orders index is lower than the output index by 2.5 percentage points, meaning the gap between production and demand is widening, leading to rising oversupply pressures.”

Tourism revenue fell almost 70% during a three-day holiday last week compared to the same period in 2019, according to China Internatio­nal Capital Corp.

Severe flooding in southern China may also have slowed the pace of production in some areas, and a recent flare-up of the coronaviru­s has also hit confidence.

A Bloomberg Economics gauge of early indicators on the economy picked up in June, with a better performanc­e for smaller companies tempered by the still-grim global outlook.

However, the position of small firms has begun contractin­g again, according to today’s data, while mediumsize­d firms rose above 50 and larger companies improved further.

More small firms reported a lack of orders compared to larger companies, according to the NBS statement.

“China’s recovery is still on track, but the momentum could lose some steam in coming months,” said Lu Ting, chief China economist at Nomura Internatio­nal Ltd in Hong Kong.

“Despite the strong recovery between March and mid-June, we believe a full economic recovery remains distant. In our view, it is too early for Beijing to reverse its easing stance.”

 ?? STR/AFP ?? China’s factory activity expanded at a stronger pace in June, National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data showed yesterday.
STR/AFP China’s factory activity expanded at a stronger pace in June, National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data showed yesterday.

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