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Factory activity in China expanded in March after a collapse the month before.

Near-term recovery is far from assured

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BEIJING: Factory activity in China unexpected­ly expanded in March from a collapse the month before, but analysts caution that a durable nearterm recovery is far from assured as the global coronaviru­s crisis knocks foreign demand and threatens a steep economic slump.

China’s official Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose to 52 in March from a plunge to a record low of 35.7 in February, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said yesterday, above the 50-point mark that separates monthly growth from contractio­n.

Analysts polled by Reuters had expected the March PMI to come in at 45.0.

The NBS attributed the surprise rebound in PMI to its record low base in February and cautioned that the readings do not signal a stabilisat­ion in economic activity.

That view was echoed by many analysts, who warn of a further period of struggle for China’s businesses and the broader economy due to the rapid spread of the virus across the world, the unpreceden­ted lockdowns in several countries and the almost near certainty of a global recession.

“This does not mean that output is now back to its pre-virus trend. Instead, it simply suggests that economic activity improved modestly relative to February’s dismal showing, but remains well below pre-virus levels,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics, in a note to clients.

Economists are already forecastin­g a steep contractio­n in China’s firstquart­er gross domestic product, with some expecting a year-year slump of 9% or more — the first such contractio­n in three decades.

Nie Wen, economist at Shanghaiba­sed Hwabao Trust, said given weak export orders, rising stockpile and soft prices, the underlying issue facing Chinese manufactur­ers has shifted to a lack of market demand, from production shutdowns forced by Chinese authoritie­s.

The survey’s sub-index of manufactur­ing production picked up to 54.1 in March from February’s 27.8, but new export orders received by Chinese manufactur­ers were still mired in contractio­n, after ticking up to 46.4 from 28.7 in February.

Manufactur­ers are still facing big operationa­l pressures, the survey showed, with over half of the respondent­s reporting a lack of market demand and 42% reporting financing issues, both up from the previous month.

“The biggest problem facing China’s economy in the second quarter is the slumping foreign demand,” said Nie, adding that authoritie­s “may roll out more policies on top of the billions of dollars pumped into the financial system since February to boost domestic consumptio­n and tide over the shrinking overseas demand.’’

China should not set an economic growth target this year given the heightened uncertaint­y and avoid having to resort to “flood-like stimulus” to meet the goal, a central bank adviser said.

The service sector, which accounts for 60% of China’s GDP, also saw an expansion in activity, with the official non-manufactur­ing PMI rising to 52.3 from 29.6 in February, a separate NBS survey showed.

Analysts warn the outbreak could have a lingering impact despite the government loosening restrictio­ns in recent weeks, as many people remain worried about the possibilit­y of new infections or fretting about job security and potential cuts to wages as the economy struggles.

China’s urban jobless rate hit 6.2% in February, up one percentage point from the end of 2019, with analysts estimating about 5 million jobs lost in January-February period.

“The situation remains volatile as the trajectory of the Covid-19 virus outbreak in several key economies is still unpredicta­ble,” ANZ analysts said in a note.

 ?? STR/AFP ?? This photo taken on March 30, 2020 shows employees working on a battery production line at a factory in Huaibei in China’s eastern Anhui province.
STR/AFP This photo taken on March 30, 2020 shows employees working on a battery production line at a factory in Huaibei in China’s eastern Anhui province.

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