Khaleej Times

China factories breeze by views

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beijing — China’s vast manufactur­ing sector grew at the fastest pace in eight months in May, blowing past expectatio­ns and easing concerns about an economic slowdown even as risks from trade tensions with the United States and a crackdown on debt point to a bumpy ride ahead.

The official Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) released on Thursday rose to 51.9 in May, from 51.4 in April, and remained well above the 50-point mark that separates growth from contractio­n for the 22nd straight month.

Analysts surveyed by Reuters had forecast the reading would dip slightly to 51.3.

Production expanded at the fastest rate in 6 months in May while growth in new orders rose to an 8-month high, helped by rising commoditie­s prices.

The strong manufactur­ing sector readings defy concerns about an expected loss of momentum in the world’s second-biggest economy, as policymake­rs navigate debt risks and rocky trade relations with the United States.

In particular, export orders improved from the previous month. Some economists suspect that Chinese firms have been front-loading shipments due to the Sino-US trade frictions. On the whole, however, economists were sceptical of the sustainabi­lity of industrial sector strength, suggesting the broader economy will face pressure over coming months.

“We doubt this strength will be sustained for long given that it appears to mostly reflect a temporary boost to industrial output from the easing of pollution controls rather than a turnaround in underlying demand,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics, in a note after the data release.

Nomura analysts were also of the view the strong PMI readings will

Big cost pressure is still one of the major problems facing Chinese manufactur­ers these days Zhao Qinghe, Official at China’s statistics bureau

be short-lived, saying “the growth of end-demand, such as infrastruc­ture and property investment, has slumped in recent months, due at least in part to the government’s deleveragi­ng efforts.”

Small firms face funding pinch

Beijing has been tightening controls on riskier investment­s, the shadow banking business and speculatio­n in the property sector, but has been keen to keep the broad economy well funded.

The industrial sector, a key source of jobs, remained in healthy shape, with profits growing at their fastest pace in six months, underpinne­d by continued strength in the steel sector.

But the latest survey showed that more manufactur­ers were concerned about tightening in funding over recent months, with 40.1 per cent of all firms polled raising the issue in May, according to Zhao Qinghe, an official with the statistics bureau. “Big cost pressure is still one of the major problems facing Chinese manufactur­ers these days,” said Zhao.

Activity of small firms contracted in May after expanding the previous month while both big and medium-sized companies all posted positive growth.

Hi-tech manufactur­ing activity rose to 54.8 in May, up from April’s 53.8, despite pending US tariff list under its intellectu­al property probe and restrictio­ns on Chinese investment­s in the US.

Washington said on Tuesday that it was moving forward with its threat to apply tariffs on Chinese imports worth up to $50 billion, reviving fresh worries of a trade war between the world’s two biggest economies. Trade tensions had ebbed only recently after Beijing pledged to buy more from the United States.

China’s economy grew at a slightly faster-than-expected pace of 6.8 per cent in the first quarter. However, signs of stress were evident with investment growth slowing to a near 20-year low in April and growth in retail sales sliding.

Boosted by government infrastruc­ture spending, a resilient housing market and unexpected strength in exports, China’s manufactur­ers helped the economy deliver strong growth last year.

Economists still expect China’s economic growth to slow to 6.5 per cent this year from 6.9 per cent in 2017, citing rising borrowing costs, tougher limits on industrial pollution and a crackdown on local government­s’ spending to keep their debt levels in check.

Most China watchers had tipped growth to soften slightly in the second quarter, from a solid 6.8 per cent in the first 3 months of the year.

 ?? — AP ?? Chinese production expanded at the fastest rate in 6 months in May.
— AP Chinese production expanded at the fastest rate in 6 months in May.

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