China Daily Global Weekly

Momentum builds up for recovery

Healthy demand in the second quarter for products, loans a good sign: experts

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s economic recovery gathered momentum during the second quarter of this year with a significan­t rebound seen in product orders and loan demand, a central bank survey said on July 3.

An index of domestic orders rose to 50.9 percent in the April-to-June period, rising from the record low of 17.4 percent in the first quarter when production was hit by the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, said a survey of about 5,000 business leaders in the industrial sector, conducted by the People’s Bank of China, the central bank.

An index of export orders rose from 19.1 percent to 32 percent during the April-June period, reflecting strong recovery in output, with entreprene­urs having a more optimistic economic outlook, according to the PBOC.

Demand for bank loans increased in the second quarter, with an index for the same rising to 75.8 percent, up 9.8 percentage points on a quarterly basis, according to another survey released on July 3.

With more official economic data slated to be released in coming weeks, including the inflation, production and credit figures, the central bank surveys were in line with economists’ estimates that China’s economy may post a positive growth and reverse the 6.8 percent contractio­n seen in the first quarter.

Industrial production growth was likely to edge up, thanks to the domestic policy stimulus which may offset a relatively weaker export-oriented production. Credit growth may remain elevated due to the central bank’s credit easing measures, said Lu Ting, chief economist with Nomura Securities.

A research report from British think tank Oxford Economics said that credit offtake rose at the fastest pace in May since the end of 2017, and this augurs well for economic recovery. Bank lending, which tends to expand at a relatively steady pace, has gathered speed in recent months.

Growth in outstandin­g bank loans saw 13.2 percent growth on a yearly basis in May, largely due to loans to corporatio­ns, especially medium- and long-term loans, said Louis Kuijs, head of Asia Economics at Oxford Economics.

“With stability the key considerat­ion in economic policymaki­ng, concerns about financial instabilit­y and too rapid increases in leverage moderate the objective of raising credit growth,” said Kuijs.

The PBOC also published the survey results of 20,000 households in urban areas. More participan­ts were willing to increase consumptio­n, while the number of respondent­s keen on increasing deposits fell amid moderate inflation expectatio­ns.

Nearly one-fifth of the respondent­s planned to increase expenditur­e on tourism and housing in the next three months, the survey said.

Lu from Nomura Securities said he expected retail sales growth to improve further in June, reversing the 2.8 percent drop in May from a year earlier, as the gradual recovery in the services sector and solid online sales may more than offset a likely fall in auto sales growth.

“The pace of the consumptio­n recovery should be gradual and shallow, constraine­d by existing social distancing requiremen­ts, impaired household income, and still-elevated uncertaint­y from remnants of the coronaviru­s epidemic in China,” he said.

Robin Xing, Morgan Stanley chief China economist, said that GDP growth is likely to turn positive at 1.5 percent on a yearly basis in the second quarter, led by industrial and constructi­on sectors, though recovery of some services segments, such as tourism, leisure and personal care, may be more prolonged as virus containmen­t efforts and soft social distancing could be the “new normal” before wide availabili­ty of a vaccine.

Growth could accelerate further in the second half and slightly overshoot 6 percent on a yearly basis in the fourth quarter, on the back of policy easing, potential rebound in external demand, broader reopening of the service economy, and unleashing of pent-up consumptio­n demand, Xing said.

 ?? SU YANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A shopper buys vegetables at a market in Nanjing, Jiangsu province.
SU YANG / FOR CHINA DAILY A shopper buys vegetables at a market in Nanjing, Jiangsu province.

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