China's economy loses momentum as COVID curbs hit factories, consumers
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[November 15, 2022] By
Ellen Zhang and Kevin Yao
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's economy
suffered a broad slowdown in October as factory output grew more slowly
than expected and retail sales fell for the first time in five months,
underscoring faltering demand at home and abroad.
The world's second-largest economy is facing a series of headwinds
including protracted COVID-19 curbs, global recession risks and a
property downturn. In a sign of persistent weakness in sector, data on
Tuesday also showed property investment falling at its fastest pace
since early 2020 in October.
The downbeat data poses a challenge for Chinese policymakers as they
steer the $17 trillion dollar economy through choppy waters, following
recent moves to ease some COVID curbs and give financial support to the
struggling property sector.
"October activity growth broadly slowed and missed market expectations,
pointing to a weak start to Q4 as a worsening COVID situation, prolonged
property downturn and slower export growth more than offset continued
policy stimulus," analysts at Goldman Sachs said in a note.
Industrial output rose 5.0% in October from a year earlier, missing
expectations for a 5.2% gain in a Reuters poll and slowing from the 6.3%
growth seen in September, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS)
showed on Tuesday.
Retail sales, a gauge of consumption, fell for the first time since May,
when Shanghai was under a city-wide lockdown. Sales dropped 0.5%,
against expectations for a 1.0% rise and compared with a 2.5% gain in
September.
A week-long National Day holiday did little to boost consumption in
October, traditionally a popular month for domestic travels.
COVID outbreaks widened across the country in October, disrupting the
pandemic-sensitive services sector, including the restaurant industry.
China's catering revenue slumped 8.1%, down sharply from a 1.7% drop in
September, NBS data showed.
In response to the weak data, investment bank JPMorgan revised down its
year-on-year GDP forecast for China in the fourth quarter to 2.7% from a
prior 3.4%, while Citi also trimmed to 3.7% from 4.6% previously.
Domestic COVID containment measures were placing a "huge" pressure on
the economy, said NBS spokesperson Fu Linghui, adding that downside
risks from the global economy were rising.
"The impact from the triple pressures on economic operations – shrinking
demand, supply shocks and weakening expectations – is growing," said Fu
at a press conference in Beijing.
The economic outlook remains gloomy despite Beijing's move to ease some
COVID curbs, said Zichun Huang, economist at Capital Economics.
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A worker polishes a bicycle steel rim at
a factory manufacturing sports equipment in Hangzhou, Zhejiang
province, China September 2, 2019. China Daily via REUTERS
"With exports cooling, the property sector still in the doldrums and
the zero-COVID policy likely to remain in place longer than many
hope, the near-term outlook is gloomy."
Despite the disappointing figures, Chinese stocks rose on Tuesday on
signs of easing Sino-U.S. tensions after a meeting between U.S.
President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping, while Beijing's
latest supportive steps also lifted sentiment.
PROPERTY STILL IN THE DOLDRUMS
Property investment fell 16.0% year-on-year in October -- its
biggest drop since January-February 2020, according to Reuters
calculations based on NBS data. It slumped 12.1% in September.
Property sales measured by floor area dropped 23.2% year-year in
October, falling for a 15th straight month, with buyers reluctant to
take on more debt as the economy slows amid protracted COVID
restrictions.
China's property sector has slowed sharply as the government has
sought to restrict excessive borrowing. A plan to shore up liquidity
outlined by Chinese regulators on Sunday sent Chinese property
stocks and bonds soaring on Monday.
Chinese financial regulator said in a notice published on Monday it
will allow property developers to access some pre-sale housing
funds, in the latest move to relieve the liquidity crunch.
"It is clear that new policies to boost domestic demand are needed
to refuel China's fragile recovery. Sluggish consumption and
faltering property investment remain dawdlers, due to still-weak
expectations on household income and macro growth," said Bruce Pang,
chief economist at Jones Lang Lasalle.
Fixed asset investment expanded 5.8% in the first 10 month of the
year, versus expectations for a 5.9% rise and growth of 5.9% in
January-September.
Hiring remained low among companies growing increasingly wary about
their finances.
The nationwide survey-based jobless rate stayed at 5.5% in October,
unchanged from September. The survey-based jobless rate in 31 major
cities picked up to 6.0% from 5.8% in September.
The country is on track to miss its annual growth target of around
5.5%, analysts say. Economists in a Reuters poll expect the economy
to grow 3.2% in 2022.
(Reporting by Ellen Zhang and Kevin Yao; Additional Reporting by
Liangping Gao, Ryan Woo and Liz Lee; Editing by Ana Nicolaci da
Costa and Raissa Kasolowsky)
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