China's
slowing deepens gloomy economic outlook
CONCERNS
about the global economic outlook have deepened with fresh data
showing falling orders for China's small and medium manufacturers
22
June, 2012
As
export orders slowed to three-year lows, fears that the slowdown now
under way in the world's second-largest economy will be sharper than
expected sent mining shares and the Australian dollar lower.
The
benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index fell 44.8 points, or 1.08 per cent,
to 4087.6, while the dollar was trading at $US1.0161 at 5pm AEST,
down from $US1.0194c on Wednesday.
Investors
were also disappointed with the outcome of the US Federal Reserve
policy meeting overnight.
The
news comes on top of the ongoing debt crisis in the eurozone and
three months of weak employment data from the US, with China's
slowdown already affecting the rest of the developing world.
Following
this month's interest rate cut, Chinese policy-makers are expected to
take further monetary easing measures on top of stimulus measures
already introduced.
"There
should be another cut in interest rates and in the bank reserve ratio
in July," China Everbright Bank senior economist Sheng Hongqing
said. "The export situation is very difficult."
The
HSBC flash purchasing managers index fell to its lowest level in
seven months, edging back to 48.1 from 48.4 last month.
Any
value below 50 represents a contraction in activity.
"China's
manufacturing sector continued to slow in June, though the pace of
slowdown seems to be slowing. With external headwinds remaining
strong, exports are likely to decelerate in the coming months,"
HSBC economist Hu Qingbin said in a statement.
"The
sharp fall of prices and moderation of new orders suggest weak
domestic demand, posing de-stocking pressures for Chinese
manufacturers. All this is likely to weigh on the jobs market. As
such, we expect more decisive policy stimulus to reverse the growth
slowdown."
The
latest figures come from an economy that has been deliberately slowed
down by the government, mainly via restrictions on property buying
that have cooled demand and prices in the market that contributed
several percentage points to the country's growth.
But
the continuing crisis in Europe has seen exports to China's biggest
market slump, which is something of double whammy to its economy.
China's
GDP growth fell to 8.1 per cent in the first quarter of the year. It
was the country's slowest growth in almost three years and the
figures for this quarter are forecast to be similar or worse.
Besides,
jobs in low-margin manufacturing in China are beginning to move to
countries such as Bangladesh and Vietnam as wages and other input
costs rise.
The
consensus view among economists is that China will see growth of 8
per cent this year -- Credit Suisse expects 7.7 per cent -- compared
with 9.2 per cent last year.
The
HSBC index gauges activity in the small to medium manufacturing
sector, which is more export-focused compared with the official
government PBNI index due out on the first day of each month and
which measures manufacturing activity at larger, mainly state-owned,
firms.
The
official PMI fell more than expected last month to 50.4 from 53.4 in
April because of weaker than expected economic data for April. This
encouraged China's policymakers to cut interest rates by 0.25 per
cent this month -- the first cut since 2008 amid other forms of
monetary easing as a stimulus measure.
While
there was some improvement in May data, particularly in China's trade
figures, economists remain divided as to how quickly China can
recover.
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