Mainland Factory Activity Sees Further Pick-up

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2020-07-31 HKT 09:34

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  • The official manufacturing Purchasing Manager’s Index (PMI) rose for the fifth month in a row. File photo: Reuters

    The official manufacturing Purchasing Manager’s Index (PMI) rose for the fifth month in a row. File photo: Reuters

The factories on the mainland stepped up activity in July for a fifth straight month as improving prospects for electrical and pharmaceutical goods helped sustain a broader recovery from earlier coronavirus shutdowns.

The world's second-largest economy has largely shaken off the strict lockdowns that led to weeks of business paralysis earlier this year, although it is now battling the most aggressive return of the novel coronavirus in months, driven by infections in the country's west and northeast.

The government's manufacturing Purchasing Manager’s Index (PMI), released on Friday, unexpectedly rose to 51.1 in July from June's 50.9. That was the highest reading since March and dashed analyst expectations for a fall to 50.7. The 50-point mark separates growth from contraction on a monthly basis.

The PMI echoed upbeat readings from other major Asian export nations, with factory production in South Korea jumping at the fastest rate in more than 11 years, and Japan's output snapping four months of decline.

However, analysts caution the recovery could stall amid the resurgence in global infections and as Chinese factories deal with disruptions from continuing floods.

"The current rapid pace of recovery is likely to slow in the coming months as the initial boost from re-opening businesses fades," said Julian Evans-Pritchard, of Capital Economics.

"The prop to exports from shipments of goods linked to the pandemic (masks, medical products and work-from-home equipment) is also likely to diminish."

Reinforcing the downbeat outlook for global demand, industry research released on Friday showed worldwide smartphone sales shrank 14% year-on-year in the second quarter.

The PMI survey showed new export orders fell, indicating continued pressure on external demand, while companies continued to shed more employees than they hired.

However, the pace of declines slowed from the previous month, suggesting a bottoming out in these trends while production and total new orders both hit four-month highs.

Small companies continue to feel both supply and demand pressure, with a sub-index for them falling further into contraction, said Zhao Qinghe, an official at the National Bureau of Statistics, which publishes the PMI.

In the services sector, activity also expanded for the fifth straight month, driven by strong construction as the mainland ramps up infrastructure projects but also suggesting consumer confidence is recovering. (Reuters)

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Last updated: 2020-07-31 HKT 11:30

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