Bangkok Post

China’s factory gauge holds up in May

Growth in services sector accelerate­s

- YAWEN CHEN RYAN WOO

BEIJING: China’s manufactur­ing and services sectors expanded at a solid pace in May thanks to robust constructi­on and infrastruc­ture investment, welcome news for authoritie­s trying to strike a balance between maintainin­g stable economic growth and defusing debt risks.

The official manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) was at 51.2 in May, unchanged from April, a monthly survey by the National Bureau of Statistics showed yesterday. Analysts polled by Reuters had predicted a reading of 51.0.

The survey results suggest authoritie­s were having some success in stabilisin­g the broader economy without risking a sharper slowdown in growth as they try to defuse bubble risks from years of creditfuel­ed stimulus.

“On the whole, China’s economy is changing into a trend of stabilisat­ion from a momentary spike and drop,” Zhang Liqun, an analyst with the China Logisticas Informatio­n Centre, said in a statement.

Most analysts agree that momentum in China will slow after strong first quarter growth of 6.9%, as Beijing’s crackdown on its financial sector is expected to take a toll on corporates’ financing costs.

So far the slowdown has been benign, however, with some key sectors such as constructi­on activity holding up well.

The statistics bureau said constructi­on remained robust despite slowing a notch from the previous month, as infrastruc­ture investment speeded up, boosting demand for steel.

Indeed, activity in the steel industry expanded the most in a year in May, supported by higher new orders, a separate industry survey showed, suggesting stillsolid demand in constructi­on.

Growth in the services sector also accelerate­d to 54.5 as commercial services such as retail and railway transporta­tion expanded on rising demand.

New orders for China’s manufactur­ers kept pace with April at 52.3, with export orders firming a touch by 0.1 percentage point to 50.7, suggesting external demand held up.

Production stayed well within expansiona­ry territory, though growth eased to 53.4 compared to last month’s 53.8.

The government has set a more modest growth target of around 6.5% for 2017, after achieving a slightly higher 6.7% target in 2016.

The crackdown on financial risks, however, is seen pushing borrowing costs up and dragging on growth.

ANZ analysts estimate the average lending rate has edged up by around 30 basis points in the past few months.

“We suspect that the current stability of growth will prove temporary,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard, a Singapore-based China economist at Capital Economics. “With the regulatory crackdown on financial risks still weighing on credit growth, it will be difficult to avoid a further slowdown in the coming months.”

There are also doubts about whether other sectors of the economy will be able to pick up the slack if the property market slows as persistent curbs gradually take the heat out of the market.

Those worries were inflamed last week when Moody’s Investors Service downgraded China’s credit ratings for the first time in nearly 30 years, saying it expects the financial strength of the economy will erode in coming years as growth slows and debt continues to rise.

China’s growth impulse is also being challenged by a slowing trend in producer price inflation. Official data showed on Saturday profits earned by Chinese industrial firms slowed to its weakest in four months in April.

The input price sub-index dropped to 49.5 in May, according to the statistics bureau’s May PMI survey, after easing to 51.8 in April, as the tailwind from a commoditie­s boom weakens.

Output prices also slipped to 47.6 from April’s 48.7.

China’s biggest steelmaker, Baoshan Iron & Steel Co Ltd, for instance, cut its main steel product prices for May and June after a long series of increases.

Property sales growth also slipped in April and a strong rebound in commodity prices appears to have peaked, pointing to a continued slowdown in the industrial sector.

On whole, however, analysts don’t expect economic growth to slow sharply this year, noting the government is keen to maintain stable economic and financial conditions heading into a key political leadership reshuffle later in the year.

“In the months leading up to the 19th Party Congress in November, stability will remain the top priority for Chinese policymake­rs,” said ANZ’s chief China economist Raymond Yeung.

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