China
Manufacturing Unexpectedly Contracts As Orders Drop
China’s
manufacturing unexpectedly shrank for the first time in nine months
as new orders contracted and output rose at a slower pace, signaling
the slowdown in the world’s second-biggest economy is deepening.
2
September, 2012
The
Purchasing Managers Index fell to 49.2 in August from 50.1 in July,
the National Bureau of Statistics and China Federation of Logistics
and Purchasing said yesterday in Beijing. Australia & New Zealand
Banking Group Ltd. cut its estimate for China’s full-year growth
after the report.
The
data increase pressure on Premier Wen Jiabao to reverse the slowdown
ahead of the transfer of power to a new Communist Party leadership
that begins later this year. Record unemployment in the euro area and
a jobless rate stuck at more than 8 percent in the U.S. may crimp an
export rebound while slumping corporate earnings, bad debts at banks
and property curbs are restraining investment in China.
“The
government won’t want to hand over an economy in a hard landing to
the next administration, so authorities are likely to become bolder
with policy easing, said Liu Li-Gang, chief China economist at ANZ in
Hong Kong. “They could continue to use tax relief and faster
approval of infrastructure investment to instill confidence, but the
most effective policy tool in the short term is to aggressively ease
the reserve- requirement ratio.”
Support
Lending
Liu
lowered his 2012 growth estimate to 7.8 percent from 8.2 percent and
said the risks to the forecast “are biased towards the downside.”
He didn’t give a projection for the third quarter.
The
People’s Bank of China cut interest rates in June and July and
lowered the reserve-requirement ratio for banks three times starting
in November as part of the government’s efforts to support lending
and boost growth. The ratio, which is now 20 percent for the biggest
banks, hasn’t been reduced since May.
The
benchmark Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP) of stocks fell 0.3
percent on Aug. 31 to the lowest level since February 2009, capping a
fourth month of losses, after declining earnings from companies
including Sany Heavy Industry Co. underscored the impact of the
nation’s economic slowdown.
The
yuan strengthened for the fifth week, the longest winning streak
since April 2011, on bets policy makers will act to revive the
economy. The currency has lost about 0.9 against the U.S. dollar this
year after rising 4.7 percent in 2011.
Orders
Slump
The
August PMI reading was lower than the estimates of 24 of the 25
economists in a Bloomberg News survey that had a median forecast of
50.0, the dividing line between expansion and contraction. The index
is based on responses from purchasing managers at 820 companies in 31
industries.
A
gauge of export orders was unchanged from the previous month at 46.6,
marking the third straight contraction, federation data showed. The
decline in the new orders index deepened to 48.7 and a measure of
output fell to 50.9.
“The
index reflects continuing difficulties for the manufacturing sector
and without strong supportive policies amid weak global demand, the
PMI may drop further,” said Hu Yifan, a Hong Kong-based economist
with Haitong International Securities Group who previously worked for
the World Bank. A reduction in banks’ reserve requirements “would
send a positive signal to the markets to boost confidence
particularly now that the PMI has broken the critical mark of 50.”
Stabilizing
Growth
A
separate purchasing managers index released by HSBC Holdings Plc and
Markit Economics indicated that manufacturing may have contracted for
a 10th month in August, according to a preliminary reading on Aug.
23. The final number for the survey, which covers more than 420
companies and is weighted more toward smaller businesses, is due
tomorrow.
The
employment gauge in yesterday’s survey was below 50 for a third
month and at the lowest level since January, while HSBC’s
preliminary reading showed the sixth straight contraction.
The
deterioration in labor conditions “could push Beijing to step up
policy easing or stimulus in supporting growth,” said Lu Ting,
chief China economist at Bank of America Corp. in Hong Kong. “In
this year of leadership transition, employment and social stability
should be of top concern to politicians,” he said.
China’s
gross domestic product expanded 7.6 percent in the second quarter
from a year earlier, the slowest pace in three years. Estimates for
growth this quarter ranged from 7.4 percent to 8.3 percent in a
Bloomberg News survey last month.
Stabilizing
Growth
The
difficulties in stabilizing growth are “relatively large,” the
official Xinhua News Agency cited Wen as saying during an inspection
tour to Guangdong province on Aug. 24 and 25. Wen called for extra
measures to promote exports to meet the economic expansion target,
according to Xinhua. The premier in March set a 7.5 percent growth
goal for this year.
In
a report late yesterday, Xinhua cited Wen as saying the country needs
to resolutely curb speculative property investment and that controls
on the real-estate industry are still in a “critical period,”
indicating loosening policies won’t include easing home-purchase
limits.
Zhang
Zhiwei, Hong Kong-based chief China economist at Nomura Holdings Inc.
said he expects a cut in banks’ reserve- requirement ratio in early
September, probably before the release of the monthly data that will
start on Sept. 9 with inflation and industrial output. The
government’s concern that property prices will rebound means
interest rates won’t be lowered, he said.
UBS
AG economist Wang Tao estimates industrial output growth eased to 8.9
percent from a year earlier in August, which would be the first
reading below 9 percent since May 2009.
Profits
Decline
Manufacturers’
earnings are falling as the slowing economy curbs demand. Chinese
industrial companies’ profits declined in July by the most this
year, a government report showed Aug. 27.
Sany
Heavy, China’s biggest construction-equipment maker, on Aug. 30
posted a 13 percent decline in first-half profit on slumping demand
for excavators. Eastern China-based Weichai Power Co., the world’s
No. 1 maker of heavy-duty engines, reported a 26 percent drop in
first-half sales and a 46 percent decline in net income.
“The
government doesn’t want to be too aggressive with easing for fear
of reigniting asset bubbles,” said Song Seng Wun, an economist with
CIMB Research Pte. in Singapore. “But with the whole economy losing
steam, they may need to switch from a gradual
acupuncture-treatment-style approach to a western medicine-based
approach of taking a Panadol and hoping for the best.”
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