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						European factories bounce 
						as Asia struggles, but Brexit poses threats 
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		 [July 01, 2016] 
		By Jonathan Cable and Wayne Cole 
			LONDON/SYDNEY (Reuters) - Factories 
			across Europe enjoyed a buoyant month in June but that growth could 
			be under threat after Britons voted to leave the European Union last 
			week, surveys conducted almost entirely before the historic 
			referendum showed.
 Highlighting another worrying trend for the global economy, China's 
			vast factory sector flatlined as exports shrank and jobs were cut, 
			in a slowdown across Asia that could lead to yet more policy 
			stimulus as doubts grow over the potency of measures taken so far.
 
 The hard times signaled by a range of surveys was not what the world 
			needed a week after Britain voted to leave the EU, condemning the 
			bloc to months if not years of political and economic instability.
 
 "The unimaginable has happened and the UK vote will cast a long 
			shadow over the UK, Europe and global markets for some time to 
			come," warned Westpac head currency strategist Robert Rennie.
 
 "A structurally weaker pound, a softer euro and weaker global growth 
			beckons."
 
 Markit/CIPS reported a surprisingly strong reading of 52.1 in June 
			for their UK Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI), up from 
			May's 50.4. That was the strongest reading since January and better 
			than all forecasts in a Reuters poll of economists, which produced a 
			consensus view of 49.9.
 
 But data company Markit warned "almost all" the data from 
			manufacturers used in its survey were received before the June 23 
			referendum.
 
			
			 
			"Leaving the EU threatens the loss of 50 free trade agreements with 
			other countries, as well as restricted access to the single market 
			itself," said Samuel Tombs at Pantheon Macroeconomics.
 "In short, then, the UK's meager manufacturing sector - which 
			accounts for just 10 percent of GDP - is not going to prevent the 
			overall economy slipping into recession."
 
 Bank of England Governor Mark Carney said on Thursday the central 
			bank would probably need to pump more stimulus into Britain's 
			economy over the summer to cope with the shock of the vote.
 
 June was also stronger across the euro zone, where factory activity 
			expanded at its fastest rate this year as discounting helped drive 
			up new orders and output, encouraging companies to hire more people 
			to meet the demand.
 
 The Markit PMI for the euro zone climbed to 52.8 from May's 51.5, 
			higher than the earlier flash reading of 52.6. Anything above 50 
			indicates growth.
 
 "However, euro zone manufacturers will be worried that demand in 
			both domestic and foreign markets could be significantly weakened by 
			heightened uncertainty following the UK's vote," said Howard Archer 
			at IHS Global Insight.
 
 CHINA BRAKES
 
 Among other surveys out on Friday, China's official PMI slipped a 
			tick to 50.0 in June, dead on the level that is divides growth from 
			contraction.
 
 One saving grace was the services sector measure, which nudged up to 
			53.7 in a positive sign for consumer activity.
 
 More worrying was the Caixin version of the PMI, which covers a 
			greater share of smaller firms, where the index fell to a four-month 
			trough of 48.6 in June.
 
			
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			An employee works on an assembly line producing automobiles at a 
			factory in Qingdao, Shandong Province, China, March 1, 2016. 
			REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo 
            
			
 
That had to be a disappointment to Beijing, which has resorted to ever-looser 
fiscal and monetary policy to support growth and jobs in the world's second 
largest economy.
 It was a frustration likely shared by the Bank of Japan, which found major 
manufacturers in a morose mood despite all its attempts at aggressive easing.
 
The reasons were clear in the Markit/Nikkei measure of Japan's PMI, which edged 
up slightly to 48.1 in June but stayed in contractionary territory for the 
fourth straight month.
 Government data were no better, with household spending down for the third month 
in a row and core consumer prices suffering their biggest annual drop since 
2013.
 
 News from South Korea was relatively cheery as its PMI reached a six-month high, 
yet at 50.5 it was just barely into expansionary territory.
 
 Indeed, a separate report showed shipments from the world's sixth-largest 
exporter fell for an 18th straight month in June.
 
 Likewise, electronics powerhouse Taiwan reported some improvement but again 
growth was only marginal.
 
India's PMI did hit a three-month high but it remains an outlier in an Asian 
region which could face a whole new threat should the Brexit vote herald a wider 
retreat from free trade.
 Vaninder Singh, an economist at Royal Bank of Scotland in Singapore, noted the 
region had been the greatest beneficiary of globalization and any shift to trade 
barriers or closed borders would hurt Asia the most.
 
 "Overall, what is clear to us is that the impact, will be limited in the 
near-term, but much more significant in the medium-term," said Singh.
 
 
 "We expect this event and what it represents to subtract as much as 0.3 percent 
from growth next year compared to our pre-event baseline and expect Asian 
central banks to respond with another round of easing."
 
 (Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Hugh Lawson)
 
				 
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