While China is relying on increased government stimulus to steer its
economy away from reliance on exports and towards consumer spending,
Europe has taken the opposite approach, combining fiscal austerity
with near-zero interest rates.
The latest HSBC/Markit Flash China Manufacturing Purchasing
Managers' Index suggested that government stimulus was working,
rising to 52 in July from 50.7 in June, and beating the consensus
forecast of 51 in a Reuters poll.
That was the highest reading since January 2013, and well above the
50-point level that separates growth from contraction for the second
consecutive month.
A comparable survey of private sector activity in the euro zone also
rose more than expected, to 54.0 from 52.8, even without signs of
the resurgence in inflation from dangerously low levels that the
European Central Bank is trying to engineer.
Taken together with data pointing to a solid expansion for the
United States, and with most stock markets rallying or near record
highs, the reports suggest the world economy is in a brighter spot.
"The strength of this morning's data from China and the euro zone
offers some encouragement that there is some momentum building for
the global economy at the start of the third quarter," said Mark
Wall, European economist at Deutsche Bank.
"We still don't have second quarter growth numbers for the U.S. or
euro zone. And although the Bundesbank said earlier this week that
German growth could stagnate in the second quarter, what's at least
encouraging from the PMI data is it seems any disappointment yet to
be published might well be temporary."
Markit's manufacturing PMI for the United States is due later on
Thursday and is also expected to show improving activity, rising to
57.5 from 57.3 last month.
CHINA OUTLOOK STILL SHAKY
The PMI data coincided with the latest Reuters poll on the outlook
for Asia, which suggested China will struggle to maintain these
rates of growth into next year, partly because of risks a property
market downturn might threaten the economy.
Analysts polled by Reuters expect the world's No. 2 economy to
expand by 7.4 percent this year, slightly below the last reported
rate of 7.5 percent. That would be its weakest growth in nearly a
quarter of a century.
Some analysts say that more stimulus may be needed to offset any
downdraft from falling property prices and activity. There are also
increasing risks in the financial system, such as deteriorating
credit quality.
Mainland China stocks <.CSI300> jumped after the PMI report while
shares in the rest of Asia edged higher. The Australian dollar <AUD=D4>
hit a three-week high on prospects of stronger exports to China.
[to top of second column] |
For the euro zone, where forecasters are even more gloomy about
growth prospects, the latest PMI data were a bright spot and
triggered a rally in the euro from an eight-month low.
Markit said the data suggest quarterly economic growth of 0.4
percent in the current quarter if a similar pace is maintained over
the next two months.
Lagging economies like Spain performed even better, with the largest
monthly increase in business activity recorded since August 2007
accompanied by a similar surge in new orders growth.
Separate official data showed Spain's jobless rate tumbled to its
lowest in two years, although nearly a quarter of the labor force is
still out of work.
And while euro zone services business expanded at its fastest pace
since May 2011 - the PMI rose to 54.4 - the index measuring output
price changes fell to 48.3, suggesting downward pressure on
inflation, despite high raw materials costs.
With inflation stuck at 0.5 percent in June, far into the ECB's
"danger zone" below 1 percent, and well short of its 2 percent
target, that suggests policymakers still face a tough task to thwart
the threat of deflation.
"There's so much spare capacity that deflation remains a bigger risk
at the moment," said Chris Williamson, Markit's chief economist.
"Companies simply cannot push through cost increases to consumers at
this point."
Separate official data showed British retail sales were the
strongest in 10 years over the second quarter, even though they
stagnated in the latest month.
While the Bank of England and the U.S. Federal Reserve are expected
to raise interest rates from record lows in the first half of next
year, the latest Reuters poll found that rates are expected to
remain steady in most of Asia for the rest of 2014.
New Zealand's central bank lifted its official cash rate by 25 basis
points to 3.50 percent as expected on Thursday, but said it would
suspended its campaign of rate rises and take time out to measure
how they have affected the economy.
(Additional reporting by Xiaoyi Shao, Aileen Wang and Koh Gui Qing
in BEIJING; Writing by Ross Finley; Editing by Catherine Evans)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright
2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |