China's economy holds up
in May but slowing investment points to cooling
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[June 14, 2017]
By Kevin Yao and Elias Glenn
BEIJING
(Reuters) - China's economy generally remained on solid footing in May,
but tighter monetary policy, a cooling housing market and slowing
investment reinforced views that it will gradually lose momentum in
coming months.
Still, with half a year left to go, Beijing is expected to handily meet
its annual 6.5 percent economic growth target without too many bumps,
good news for President Xi Jinping ahead of a major political leadership
reshuffle later this year.
China's fast start to the year led the International Monetary Fund on
Wednesday to raise its 2017 growth outlook for the country to 6.7
percent from its 6.6 percent forecast in April, though it recommended
China accelerate reforms and rein in credit.
Credit and money supply data on Wednesday showed China may be making
progress in the battle against risky lending and rising leverage as May
bank loans topped expectations but money supply grew at the slowest
annual rate in over 20 years, which the central bank attributed to
deleveraging.
Off-balance sheet lending, or shadow banking activity, also fell sharply
in May after rising earlier in the year.
But the People's Bank of China (PBOC) said it will balance deleveraging
with the need to keep liquidity basically stable, adding that slower
money supply expansion could be a "new normal".
Slower fixed asset investment growth in May and a sharp deceleration in
housing starts seen in data on Wednesday point to some of the cooling
economists have been expecting, though stable growth in factory output
and retail sales, along with a pickup in exports, are cushioning the
impact so far.
But a rise in inventories in the industrial sector and weaker producer
price inflation will drag on growth ahead, said Louis Kuijs, head of
Asia economics at Oxford Economics in Hong Kong.
"The first half of this year was a very happy period for China in the
sense that we had that wonderful increase in output prices," said Kuijs,
referring in part to a construction boom which boosted demand and
profits of structurally unhealthy sectors such as steel.
After rolling out a slew of measures early in 2017 ranging from
short-term interest rate increases to a clampdown on riskier forms of
lending and shadow banking, authorities have appeared to pause in recent
weeks as the government looks to ensure political and financial market
stability before a Communist Party Congress in autumn.
With slower nominal growth going into next year, "the willingness to
tighten significantly (further) on the monetary side will be pretty
low", Kuijs said.
MANUFACTURING STILL SOLID, PROPERTY COOLING
Industrial output grew at a steady 6.5 percent pace in May from a year
earlier, defying expectations for a slight softening, as a government
infrastructure spree continues to boost demand for building materials
from cement to steel.
But rising inventories are a risk. In April, growth in industrial
inventories picked up to over 10 percent.
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Workers chat outside a construction site in Beijing's central
business district, December 29, 2014. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo
Weaker
growth in fixed asset investment -- at 8.6 percent for January through May --
was led by a slowdown in the property sector.
While housing sales rose by an unexpectedly solid 10 percent, growth in new
construction starts almost halved to 5.2 percent in May, according to Reuters
calculations.
Analysts expect the housing market to continue to slow, as the government
remains wary of still-rising home prices and has maintained strict controls on
home purchases and property financing.
Infrastructure spending, a key lever for the government to stabilize growth in
the face of any slowdown, slowed to 20.9 percent growth over the first five
months of the year.
Growth of private investment slowed slightly to 6.8 percent in January-May,
suggesting a slight weakening of the private sector's appetite to invest as
small- and medium-sized private firms still face challenges in accessing
financing and now rising funding costs.
Retail spending was more upbeat, rising 10.7 percent from a year earlier,
unchanged from April and beating analysts' expectations for a decline despite
the first back-to-back drop in auto sales since 2015.
FOCUSED ON THE TARGET
Economists at Nomura forecast China's economy will grow an annual 6.8 percent in
the second quarter, only marginally less than the 6.9 percent in the first
quarter and providing enough momentum to coast to the government's full-year
target even if there is some second-half softening.
Fund
managers surveyed by BofA Merrill Lynch said China's credit tightening ranked as
the top tail risk for financial markets for the second month in a row in June,
with nearly two-thirds of respondents saying it will slow Chinese business
activity but have little impact on global growth.
Sources told Reuters on Wednesday that China's central bank was checking with
lenders in Shanghai to see if tighter rules were having an impact on lending or
credit quality. Funding costs are rising slowly and banks have been raising
mortgage rates.
Still, many analysts say concerns over tighter policy are overblown as measures
so far this year have been on the edges and only target financial speculation,
not activity in the real economy.
Despite some tightening, "broader liquidity conditions such as M2 growth, loan
growth or the growth of outstanding financing are still largely stable," said
Nomura chief China economist Yang Zhao.
"Further tightening should be very limited. I don't see the People's Bank of
China (PBOC) easing liquidity or monetary policy anytime soon, but the PBOC
probably would not further tighten."
(Reporting by Kevin Yao and Lusha Zhang; Writing by Elias Glenn; Editing by Kim
Coghill and Richard Borsuk)
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