Slower China factory activity growth challenges economic recovery
prospects
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[March 31, 2023] By
Liangping Gao and Ryan Woo
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's manufacturing activity expanded at a slower
pace in March, official data showed on Friday, raising doubts about the
strength of a post-COVID factory recovery amid weaker global demand and
a property market downturn.
The services sector was stronger, with activity expanding at the fastest
pace in nearly 12 years after the end of China's zero-COVID policy in
December boosted transportation, accommodation and construction.
The official manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) stood at
51.9, against 52.6 in February, according to data from the National
Bureau of Statistics (NBS), above the 50-point mark that separates
expansion and contraction in activity on a monthly basis.
That slightly exceeded expectations of 51.5 tipped by economists in a
Reuters poll, and led to the yuan strengthening against the dollar. The
February figure had grown at the fastest pace in more than a decade.
China's economic activity picked up in the first two months of 2023 as
consumption and infrastructure investment drove a recovery after the end
of COVID-19 disruptions and retail sales swung back to growth.
Nomura economists said the strong data suggested China's economy had
reached a "sweet spot" after the end of property tightening measures and
the zero-COVID policy.
"However, amid rapidly worsening geopolitical tensions and financial
concerns outside of China, this may not last long," they added in a
note.
Exports remain weak and new home sales continue to fall, although the
rate of decline is narrowing.
Companies face challenges including weak demand, tight availability of
capital and high operating costs, and the foundations for an economic
rebound need to be further consolidated, NBS said in an accompanying
statement.
To support the rebound, China's central bank this month unexpectedly cut
the amount of cash that banks must hold as reserves for the first time
this year.
While business and consumer sentiment is starting to pick up, the
manufacturing sector remains under pressure amid sluggish global demand
and stubbornly high costs.
Any fallout from a recent crisis of confidence in the global banking
sector could also affect demand for China's goods, adding to pressure on
manufacturers.
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An employee works on the filter cloth
production line at Jingjin filter press factory in Dezhou, Shandong
province, China August 25, 2022. REUTERS/Siyi Liu
Official data this week showed the slump in Chinese industrial
firms' profits deepened in the first two months of the year, marking
a downbeat start to the recovery.
Factory activity was hit by slowing growth in production and
customer demand, with the output and new orders sub-indexes showing
declines from February's levels.
The new export order sub-index fell to 50.4 against 52.4 in
February, pointing to lacklustre external demand.
STRONG RECOVERY IN SERVICES ACTIVITY
In contrast the non-manufacturing PMI jumped to 58.2 versus 56.3 in
February, reaching the highest level since May 2011 as the services
sector recovered.
"The strong momentum will likely continue in the coming months, as
the new order index for the service sector continued to rise," said
Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset
Management.
Retail sales in the first two months jumped 3.5% from a year before,
reversing a 1.8% annual fall seen in December, raising hopes of an
economic revival led by consumption as flagging global demand
weakens exports.
The government's softening tone toward the private sector is also
boosting market confidence.
Alibaba Group founder Jack Ma's return and the firm's plans for a
major revamp have been taken as a signal that Beijing's regulatory
crackdown on private business is ending.
"These policy actions will help the economy to keep the strong
momentum. We think GDP growth may surpass 6% this year," Zhang said.
The world's second-biggest economy set a modest target for economic
growth this year of around 5% after it cooled to only 3% last year,
one of the weakest showings in nearly half a century.
(Reporting by Liangping Gao and Ryan Woo; Editing by Jamie Freed)
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