Monday, 1 December 2014

China Factory Gauge Drops as Shutdowns Add to Slowdown: Economy

Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg
Workers inspect components for vehicles on the production line at a plant operated by... Read More
A Chinese manufacturing gauge fell as factory shutdowns aggravated a pullback in the economy, raising pressure on the central bank to ease policy further after it lowered interest rates for the first time in two years.
The government’s Purchasing Managers’ Index (CPMINDX) fell to an eight-month low of 50.3 in November, compared with the 50.5 median estimate of analysts in a Bloomberg survey and October’s 50.8. Readings above 50 indicate expansion.
The government ordered factories in Beijing and surrounding regions to shut down during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum to curb pollution. China’s central bank cut interest rates
last month as the economy heads for its slowest full-year expansion since 1990.
“Today’s official PMI reading points to continued downward pressure on manufacturing activity,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard, China analyst in Singapore at Capital Economics Ltd. “The recent cut in the benchmark rate will do little to boost economic activity unless followed by a loosening of quantitative controls on lending, which policymakers will remain cautious about given concerns over mounting credit risk.”
Asian stocks fell with U.S. and European index futures.
The official PMI is released by the National Bureau of Statistics and China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing in Beijing. The index is based on responses to surveys sent to purchasing executives at 3,000 companies.
Photographer: Nelson Ching/Bloomberg News
A worker's tools are seen on a sheet of aluminum at a factory that produces aluminum... Read More
The final reading of another manufacturing PMI for November from HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics was 50.0. It was unchanged from a preliminary reading.

Factory Shutdowns

Beijing and five surrounding provinces and municipalities imposed production and construction restrictions in early November to reduce emissions for the APEC summit.
“The major drag was the APEC summit last month when the government suspended many industrial and construction activities in northern China,” said Lu Ting, Bank of America Corp.’s head of Greater China economics in Hong Kong. “We expect a rebound this month as those activities resume and after recent government easing measures.”
Most components of the official PMI declined from a month earlier, with small enterprises showing the biggest drop.
The People’s Bank of China reduced the one-year lending rate by 0.4 percentage point to 5.6 percent last month, while the one-year deposit rate was lowered by 0.25 percentage point to 2.75 percent. Economists at banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co., Barclays Plc and UBS Group AG all said the central bank will act again to shore-up demand.
Photographer: Nelson Ching/Bloomberg
Doors for automobiles are sorted near a sign for a Sonata sedan at the Beijing... Read More
To keep 2014 growth at around 7.5 percent, authorities will intensify easing efforts in December, said Li-Gang Liu, chief economist for Greater China at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Hong Kong.
“On the monetary policy front, we see that the central bank is likely to add more liquidity into the market and to encourage commercial banks to extend more credits to the real economy,” Liu wrote in a note.

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