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China factory activity expands at fastest pace in nearly a decade

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BEIJING: China’s factory activity expanded at the fastest pace in nearly a decade in July as domestic demand continued to improve after the coronaviru­s crisis, though export orders and employment remained weak, a private business survey showed.

The Caixin/markit Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose to 52.8 last month from June’s 51.2, marking the sector’s third consecutiv­e month of growth and the biggest jump since January 2011.

It also beat analysts’ forecasts for a more modest improvemen­t of 51.3. The 50-mark separates growth from contractio­n on a monthly basis.

The generally upbeat findings echoed an official survey on Friday, adding to evidence that the world’s second-largest economy is getting back to its feet faster than expected from the coronaviru­s shock, which has now been largely brought under control.

“The supply and demand sides both improved, with relevant indicators maintainin­g strong momentum,” Wang Zhe, senior economist at Caixin Insight Group, wrote in a note accompanyi­ng the Caixin survey release.

“We still need to pay attention to the weakness in both employment and overseas demand,” Wang said.

China announced unpreceden­ted emergency measures early in the year to mitigate the economic damage from the health crisis, which had caused weeks of disruption­s as most regions imposed strict lockdowns.

Growth rebounded in the second quarter after a record contractio­n in the first quarter, but analysts are looking for signs that the recovery is being fuelled by more than just temporary, pent-up demand and state-led stimulus.

The Caixin survey showed both factory output and total new orders recorded the strongest increase in July since January 2011, and the gauge for output prices rose at the fastest pace in nearly two years, signalling future producer inflation that could help boost firms’ profits, the survey showed.

However, export demand remained weak, with the sub-index for new export orders falling for the 7th month, albeit at a slower rate. The Caixin survey is believed to focus more on smaller exporters than the larger official survey.

Many manufactur­ers are still facing reduced or cancelled overseas orders, and the re-imposition of virus restrictio­ns in parts of the United States and other countries could slow down a global recovery.

The survey also showed Chinese factories cut payrolls for the seventh month to reduce costs, although job shedding moderated as sales improved. — Reuters

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