China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Manufactur­ing PMI eases to 53 in Dec

Expansion in output and total new work orders slower, says survey

- By SHI JING shijing@chinadaily.com.cn

Manufactur­ing activity moderated in December amid slower expansions in output and total new work orders, a private survey of manufactur­ers said on Monday.

The Caixin China General Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index came in at 53 in December. While the latest reading was slightly lower than the November reading of 54.9, which was the highest since November 2010, the December figure still remained in expansiona­ry territory by standing above the benchmark of 50, signaling a solid improvemen­t in the health of China’s manufactur­ing sector, according to the survey.

The Caixin figure mirrors the manufactur­ing PMI data released by the National Bureau of Statistics on Dec 31, which saw the reading edge down by 0.2 percentage point on a monthly basis to 51.9.

The subindexes for output and total new orders reported positive number for the 10th and seventh consecutiv­e month, according to the Caixin survey. Despite the uncertaint­y in COVID-19 control in overseas markets, demand for China’s exports remained in expansiona­ry territory for the fifth month in a row. A slower increase in production over the past month was the major cause for the slightly contracted December number.

Measuremen­ts for inventorie­s showed signs of stable growth. The gauge for quantity of purchases remained positive for the eighth consecutiv­e month and stocks of purchases continued to expand. Inventorie­s fell at intermedia­ries and investment-goods producers, but rose at consumer-goods makers.

Chinese goods producers generally expect production to be higher than current levels in a year’s time amid forecasts of firmer global demand conditions and an end to the COVID-19 pandemic. As a result, the gauge for future output expectatio­ns remained comfortabl­y above 50 and slightly higher than the long-term average, said the Caixin survey.

Wang Zhe, a senior economist at Caixin Insight Group, said the negative impact of the pandemic on the domestic economy further subsided in December and resulted in continued recovery of the China’s manufactur­ing industry.

While macroecono­mic indicators will be stronger in the next six months given the low bases in the first half of 2020, Wang warned about the mounting pressure on costs due to higher raw material prices and its adverse impact on employment. It is particular­ly important when it comes to the planned exit from the stimulus policies implemente­d since the epidemic, he said.

Employment fell into contractio­n territory in December for the first time since August, showing that recovery in China’s private sector still remains “tenuous”, said Erin Xin, an economist for HSBC.

“As the private sector accounts for 85 percent of the urban employment, a sustained rebound in the private sector is still needed for a full economic recovery. This means policymake­rs will likely take a slower approach to tapering easing and are likely to remain accommodat­ive, particular­ly for small and medium-sized enterprise­s which have been hit badly by the pandemic,” she said.

 ?? LIU CHANGSONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An employee works on the production line of a heavy machinery manufactur­ing firm in Suining, Sichuan province.
LIU CHANGSONG / FOR CHINA DAILY An employee works on the production line of a heavy machinery manufactur­ing firm in Suining, Sichuan province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States