Factory activity in China expands as the country’s economy stabilizes

Factory activity in China expands as the country’s economy stabilizes

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China Sept manufacturing PMI‌ 50.2 vs 49.7 in Aug

China Sept ⁢non-manufacturing PMI‍ 51.7 vs 51.0 in Aug

China Sept composite PMI 52.0 vs⁤ 51.3 in Aug

BEIJING, Sept 30 (Reuters) – China’s factory activity expanded for the first time in six months in September, ‌an official⁣ survey showed⁤ on⁤ Saturday, adding to​ a run of indicators suggesting the world’s second-largest economy has begun⁣ to ‌bottom out.

The purchasing managers’ ⁤index (PMI), based⁢ on a survey of major manufacturers, rose to 50.2 in⁣ September from 49.7, ‍according to ⁣the National Bureau of Statistics, ⁤edging⁢ above the 50-point level demarcating contraction in ⁤activity ⁤from expansion. ⁢The reading beat a forecast of 50.0.

The ​PMI, the first official statistics for September, adds to signs ⁤of⁢ stabilisation in the economy, which had sagged after an initial‌ burst of momentum early in the year when China’s ultra-restrictive COVID-19​ policies were lifted.

Preliminary signs of⁢ improvement had emerged in⁢ August, with factory output and retail sales growth accelerating while declines of exports and ⁣imports narrowed and deflationary pressures eased. Profits‍ at industrial firms posted a surprise 17.2% jump⁢ in‌ August, reversing July’s ⁤6.7% ⁣decline.

“The manufacturing PMI, plus the good industrial profit figures, ‍suggest that the economy is gradually bottoming out,” said⁢ Zhou Hao, ⁤chief economist at Guotai Junan International.

China’s non-manufacturing PMI, which incorporates sub-indexes for service sector activity ⁣and construction, also rose, coming in at 51.7 versus August’s 51.0.

The composite PMI, including⁤ manufacturing and non-manufacturing activity, climbed⁢ to 52.0 in September from 51.3.

Near-term data on the ‌radar of economists ⁢include⁢ consumer spending ‌for the longest public holiday this year. “Golden Week” kicked off on Friday with the‍ Mid-Autumn Festival, which will be ⁤followed by the National Day break through Oct. 6.

Passenger travel by rail on Friday reached ⁣20⁣ million trips, a single-day record, state media reported on Saturday, in a bullish start​ to what authorities had forecast to be “the most popular Golden Week in history”.

PROPERTY RISKS

More stable economic indicators will be welcomed by policymakers as they continue ‍to grapple with a property sector debt crisis that has rattled global markets. The authorities have announced a series of ⁢measures to shore up the property market, ⁣including cutting mortgage rates, although the sector is far from being out of the woods.

New home prices fell the⁢ fastest in⁢ 10 months in August ‌and property investment declined for an 18th⁣ straight month.

China Evergrande ‍Group (3333.HK), the world’s most indebted property developer with more than $300 billion in liabilities, said on Thursday its founder was being ⁢investigated over suspected⁣ “illegal crimes”.

The‍ Asian​ Development Bank last week trimmed its 2023 economic growth forecast for China to 4.9% from a July ‍forecast of ⁢5.0% due to the weakness in the property sector.

Analysts say more policy…

Link from www.reuters.com

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