The Edge Singapore

China’s factory activity tops decade high, boosting recovery

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China’s manufactur­ing activity recorded its highest monthly improvemen­t in more than a decade in February as factories reopened after the Lunar New Year holiday, giving more support to an economic recovery that has so far relied heavily on retail and services.

The manufactur­ing purchasing managers’ index rose to 52.6 last month from 50.1 in January, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on March 1, beating the median estimate of 50.6 in a Bloomberg survey of economists. It was the highest reading since April 2012.

The non-manufactur­ing gauge — which measures activity in both the services and constructi­on sectors — increased to 56.3 from 54.4, better than a projected improvemen­t to 54.9.

A reading above 50 represents expansion from the previous month, while anything below indicates contractio­n.

February data offer the most complete picture yet for how China’s economic recovery is shaping up, as many people returned to work following the holiday break and as a wave of Covid infections subsided. The government’s proclamati­on that Covid is “basically over” has spurred more travel and spending as movement curbs and other restrictio­ns were removed.

China’s economy continued to recover in February, thanks to an accelerati­on of activity and the resumption of production as the impact of a Covid wave subsided, said Zhao Qinghe, senior statistici­an at the NBS. Measures to stabilise growth in the country have also started to take effect, Zhao added.

The CSI 300, China’s benchmark stock index, rose 0.3% following the PMI data release, erasing earlier losses and outperform­ing a broader Asian equities gauge. The offshore yuan also improved, gaining much as 0.2%. The onshore yuan steadied. The 10-year government bond yield held firm at 2.91%.

Private figures already showed some signs of recovery as road congestion in major cities increased, subway ridership returned to pre-pandemic levels and restaurant and mall spending rose.

The recovery so far has been uneven, though. While the services sector saw a big jump in activity in January, spending on big-ticket items like homes and cars has remained weak. Factory output has also been slow, as Lunar New Year holiday closures muddled the data. Slowing exports and a muted recovery for domestic industrial demand have also weighed on manufactur­ing activity.

Top leaders have pledged to prioritise growth this year, placing an emphasis on the role that domestic demand will play in driving the recovery. The People’s Bank of China said in its latest monetary report that it would provide “sustainabl­e” support for the real economy and refrain from using “floodstyle” stimulus.

Market watchers should be able to get more clues on China’s economic blueprint on March 5 when policymake­rs gather for the annual National People’s Congress. It is at that event where Premier Li Keqiang will lay out his last government work report detailing the main economic goals for the year. — Bloomberg

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Subway ridership in China has returned to pre-pandemic levels
BLOOMBERG Subway ridership in China has returned to pre-pandemic levels

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