China's factories grow at fastest pace in over five
years as prices surge
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[September 30, 2017]
By Elias Glenn
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's manufacturing
activity grew at the fastest pace since 2012 in September as factories
cranked up output to take advantage of strong demand and high prices,
easing worries of a slowdown before a key political meeting next month.
Production, total new orders and output prices all improved to the
highest level in at least a year, while a pick-up in a reading for the
construction sector indicated a building boom is undiminished.
The official Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) released on Saturday rose
to 52.4 in September, from 51.7 in August and well above the 50-point
mark that separates growth from contraction on a monthly basis.
It marked the 14th straight month of expansion for China's massive
manufacturing industry and the highest reading since April 2012.
Analysts surveyed by Reuters had forecast the reading would ease
slightly.
The data comes ahead of the Communist Party Congress in mid-October, a
once-every-five-years meeting where new leaders are appointed and the
government's key political and economic initiatives are laid out, though
details are usually not announced until much later.
China's manufacturers are reporting their best profits in years, fueled
by government-led infrastructure spending, a strong housing market,
higher factory-gate prices and a recovery in exports.
"Over the short term, we believe the resilient demand growth and
disciplined balance sheet expansion ... will point to further
improvement in manufacturing profitability and investment returns,"
analysts at China International Capital Corporation said in a note after
the data.
But cost pressures from high raw materials prices and continued
underperformance of smaller firms mean some manufacturers are still
struggling.
"Mid- and downstream industries are worried about a further increase in
cost pressures," National Bureau of Statistics official Zhao Qinghe
wrote in comments published with the data.
INPUT PRICES CLIMB
The latest survey showed input prices continued to rise at a solid clip,
with the reading at 68.4 compared with 65.3 in August, benefiting
upstream producers such as miners, smelters and oil refiners.
Indexes for raw materials prices in the paper, wood processing and
furniture, and chemical products manufacturing industries were all above
75.0, said Zhao, indicating large price increases.
Output prices also rose but at a slower pace, pointing to lower profit
margins for companies further along the supply chain who are unable to
pass on all of the price increases to their customers.
A separate PMI on the steel industry fell to 53.7 in September from 57.2
in August but remained in solid expansion territory, as the industry
faces production restrictions aimed at reducing choking air pollution
over the winter.
Analysts at China Merchants Securities said stricter production limits
related to efforts to improve air quality and supply-side adjustments
from capacity cuts had helped to improve the supply-demand balance, with
new orders rising faster than production in September for the first time
since 2012.
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A factory floor of XCMG Group is seen in Xuzhou, Jiangsu province,
China August 14, 2015. REUTERS/Brenda Goh
For the manufacturing sector overall, inventories of raw materials and finished
goods continued to decline in September, providing little indication that
factories were stocking up in preparation for winter production cuts.
Big firms saw the strongest improvement in September, with a large firms
sub-index rising to 53.8, while one for small firms improved slightly but was
still in contraction territory at 49.4.
China's cabinet on Wednesday said that China will take a number of measures,
including tax exemptions and targeted reserve requirement ratio cuts, to
encourage banks to support small businesses.
The impressive performance for China's manufacturers comes despite a government
push to shutter outdated industrial capacity and clean up polluting industries,
though some analysts say official claims of massive capacity cuts are misleading
as overall production is still rising.
Chinese authorities are also in the midst of a campaign to reduce the risks from
a rapid build-up in debt produced by years of credit-fuelled stimulus, and the
continued strength of the industrial sector could give policymakers confidence
to stick to the push for deleveraging.
PRIVATE SURVEY SHOWS SLOWER GROWTH
A separate private survey may temper some of the enthusiasm, as it showed growth
slowed in September amid high pricing pressure and slower new order growth.
The Caixin/Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) fell to 51.0 in
September, compared with 51.6 in August, as new export order growth slipped.
So far, the regulatory clampdown has focused on the financial sector,
particularly interbank and shadow banking activity, and the pass-through to the
real economy appears to be limited.
But S&P last week downgraded China's sovereign credit rating, saying the
government's deleveraging drive has progressed slower than expected, leading to
higher economic and financial risks.
An official survey on the services sector published Saturday rose at the fastest
pace since 2014, though gains in that sector were also driven by higher input
prices.
A sub-reading for the construction sector rose to 61.1 in September from 58.0 in
August.
The official data showed firms in both the manufacturing and services sector
continued to shed workers.
(Reporting by Elias Glenn; Editing by Richard Pullin)
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