Khaleej Times

Trade war disrupting growth of factories

- Jonathan Cable and Marius Zaharia A worker walks past robots at a factory in Shanghai. China’s Markit Manufactur­ing PMI dropped to 50.8 in July.

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london/hong kong — Factory growth stuttered across the world in July, heightenin­g concerns about the global economic outlook as an intensifyi­ng trade conflict between the United States and China sent shudders through trading partners.

Global economic activity remains solid, but it has already passed its peak, according to economists polled by Reuters last month. They expect protection­ist policies on trade — which show no signs of abating — to tap the brakes.

But slowing growth, wilting confidence and trade war fears are not likely to deter major central banks moving away from their ultra-loose monetary policies put in place during the last financial crisis.

“Growth overall is still there, and while there are risks, it’s holding up. The big picture of a trade war and protection­ism is that it is a slow death — a death by a thousand paper cuts instead of anything sudden and shocking,” said Richard Kelly, head of global strategy at TD Securities.

“Growth is still resilient, unemployme­nt rates are low, inflation and wages are rising — that’s the bigger picture and so they [central banks] have to keep tightening in the face of that,” he said.

Morgan Stanley analysts estimate an 81-basis-point impact on global growth in a scenario of 25 per cent tariff hikes across all imports from China and Europe, with US growth slowing by 1 percentage point and China’s by 1.5 points.

Despite lethargic expansion rates, the European Central Bank last week reaffirmed plans to end its €2.6 trillion stimulus programme this year and the Bank of England is widely expected to raise borrowing costs on Thursday.

On Tuesday, the Bank of Japan pledged to keep its massive stimulus in place but made tweaks to reduce the adverse effects of its policies on markets and commercial banks as inflation remains stubbornly out of reach.

China has been cutting bank reserve requiremen­ts to ease the pain of its campaign to de-risk the financial system for smaller companies and support growth. It is also planning more spending on infrastruc­ture to cushion the impact of trade tensions.

European factory growth remained subdued in July, with scant sign of a pick up anytime soon. Manufactur­ers across Asia provided evidence of a loss of momentum across the region.

IHS Markit’s July final Eurozone manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index only nudged up to 55.1 from June’s 18-month low of 54.9, unchanged from an initial reading and still comfortabl­y above the 50 level that separates growth from contractio­n.

Meanwhile, British factories lost momentum and manufactur­ers were their most downbeat in nearly two years, likely raising fresh questions about the actual need for a Bank of England interest rate hike on Thursday.

China’s Caixin/Markit Manufactur­ing PMI dropped to 50.8 from June’s 51.0, broadly in line with an official survey on Tuesday.

 ?? — Reuters ??
— Reuters

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