China September final HSBC PMI at 50.2 on firmer exports

 

BEIJING, Sept 30:   China’s factory sector grew in September after rising foreign orders made up for a subdued home market, a private survey showed, suggesting Asia’s economic powerhouse is starting to turn the corner though a firm rebound remains elusive.

The final HSBC Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) edged up  to 50.2 in September from August’s 50.1, although that was below last week’s flash reading of 51.2, with domestic orders proving to be weaker than preliminary estimates suggested.

New export orders picked up the slack, climbing above the 50-point mark separating expansion from contraction to 50.7, from 47.2 in August. After seasonal adjustments, however, the expansion was slight, HSBC said on Monday.

Still, the data should support financial markets and  comfort investors eager to see China’s economy stabilise, even if the revival is likely feeble and perhaps even short-lived.

Qu Hongbin, an HSBC economist, said stronger  manufacturing growth was driven by firms replenishing their stocks, albeit slowly.

‘Growth is bottoming out on Beijing’s mini-stimulus,’ Qu said, noting however that growth in domestic demand was unchanged from August.

Beijing’s policy action and a firmer U.S. Economy — the world’s second-biggest buyer of Chinese exports after Europe — have put a floor beneath China’s economic growth, which has slowed in 12 of the last 14 quarters.

To reinvigorate growth, China’s government has fast-forwarded infrastructure investment, lowered taxes for small companies, and sustained spending in public housing.

But analysts warn that the mild pick-up in China’s  economy could fizzle if Beijing keeps its promise and enacts financial reforms that include curbing state investment, a move that would hurt growth in coming months.

There are also signs in parts of the PMI poll that the economy is not out of the woods yet.

The survey showed factories cut jobs for the sixth consecutive month in September as workers resigned and firms downsized.

And although output and new orders were shown to have  grown in September, HSBC noted that expansion was fractional after seasonal adjustments. In fact, it said some firms reported a contraction in output, citing unstable economic conditions. (AGENCIES)

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