China's industrial engine gathers speed, consumers open
wallets in boost to recovery
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[September 15, 2020] By
Gabriel Crossley and Kevin Yao
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's industrial
output accelerated the most in eight months in August, while retail
sales grew for the first time this year, suggesting the economic
recovery is gathering pace as demand starts to improve more broadly from
the coronavirus crisis.
An annual decline in fixed-asset investment over January-August also
moderated thanks to expanded stimulus from Beijing, but authorities
remain wary about the outlook given heightened external risks, including
from intensifying Sino-U.S. tensions.
After the pandemic paralysed the economy, China's recovery has been
gaining momentum as pent-up demand, government stimulus and surprisingly
resilient exports propel a rebound. Floods across southwestern China
that disrupted production in July have receded.
"Strong external demand, a further recovery from the pandemic and
pent-up demand from the floods all contributed to the robust activity
data in August," Ting Lu, chief China economist at Nomura, said in a
note to clients.
"We expect a further, albeit gradual, recovery of the services sector, a
steady improvement in retail sales and elevated fixed-asset investment
growth."
Industrial output growth quickened to 5.6% in August from a year
earlier, the fastest in eight months, data from the National Statistics
Bureau showed on Tuesday. Analysts polled by Reuters had expected a 5.1%
rise from 4.8% in July.
Retail sales also beat analysts' forecast with a 0.5% rise on-year,
snapping a seven-month downturn and bettering expectations for zero
growth. In July, sales dropped 1.1%, but consumer confidence has been
picking up lately, from spending on automobiles and duty-free shopping.
Auto sales rose 11.8% in August year-on-year while sales of telecoms
products jumped 25.1%, the data showed.
The decline in fixed-asset investment slowed, falling 0.3% in
January-August from the year-ago period, compared with a forecast 0.4%
slide and a larger 1.6% decline in the first seven months of the year.
Private sector fixed-asset investment, which accounts for 60% of total
investment, fell a less steep 2.8% in January-August, compared with a
5.7% decline in the first seven months. Property investment, a crucial
growth driver, also jumped the most in 16 months in August.
In commodities, China posted record output in both crude steel and
aluminium last month thanks to robust demand from the construction
sector and recovery in automobile sales.
"We think that China’s economic recovery is on a reasonably firm footing
now and should continue through Q4 and into 2021, with solid investment
growth, gradually recovering consumption momentum and resilient
exports," said Louis Kuijs at Oxford Economics.
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An employee works at a production line manufacturing optical fiber
cables at a factory of the Zhejiang Headway Communication Equipment
Co in Huzhou, Zhejiang province, China May 15, 2019.
REUTERS/Stringer
Chinese stocks <.SSEC> led Asian markets higher, while the yuan <CNY=CFXS>
currency rose to 16-month highs on the upbeat data. [MKTS/GLOB]
RISKS TO RECOVERY
Recent economic indicators ranging from trade to producer prices and factory
activity all suggested a further pick up in the industrial sector, and the
broader economy.
Government stimulus has been a powerful domestic driver, while momentum has also
been supported by Beijing's largely successful efforts to get the virus under
control.
"Fiscal and monetary policy stimulus should continue to support the recovery.
But we expect the impact of policy stimulus to lose some punch with credit
growth easing in Q4," Oxford Economics' Kuijs said.
Data last week showed China's August exports marking the strongest annual gain
since March 2019, as more of its trading partners eased coronavirus lockdowns.
Lu at Nomura has raised forecasts on China's third-quarter economic growth to
5.2%, versus the actual 3.2% pace in April-June, and expects fourth-quarter
growth to pick up further to 5.7%.
Analysts at ANZ, meanwhile, have raised their 2020 China growth forecast to
2.1%, but the projected full-year rate would still be the weakest pace since
1976.
Some analysts fear that the recovery could stall, hurt by rising tensions
between Washington and Beijing, which many expect could escalate ahead of the
U.S. presidential election in November.
Moreover, the possibility of another wave of local infections in the winter, and
the continued rise in COVID-19 cases across a number of countries, led by India
and the United States, have many investors nervous about the outlook.
Those worries were partially underscored by statistical bureau spokesman Fu
Linghui, who told reporters that the economic recovery remains unbalanced.
"Externally, there are still many unstable and uncertain factors. On the
domestic side... some industries and enterprises are still facing difficulties,
and the recovery is unbalanced," Fu said.
(Additional reporting by Colin Qian; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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