China Manufacturing Expands at Faster Pace, PMI Shows (Update2)
By Bloomberg News
Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) -- China’s manufacturing expanded at the fastest pace in 18
months and a government researcher said economic growth will accelerate this
quarter.
The Purchasing Managers’ Index rose to a seasonally adjusted 55.2 in October
from 54.3 in September, the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said today
in an e-mailed statement in Beijing. An index of export orders climbed to 54.5
from 53.3.
Premier Wen Jiabao’s $586 billion stimulus plan and unprecedented growth innew
loans are sustaining China’s rebound amid signs that exports may start to
recover as the global slump eases. The world’s third-biggest economy may expand
at a 9.5 percent annual pace this quarter, Zhang Liqun, of the State Council
Development and Research Center, said in the statement.
“China’s recovery has been impressive, but has been heavily reliant on
government-directed investment,” said Brian Jackson, Hong Kong-based strategist
for emerging markets at Royal Bank of Canada. “External demand will provide an
additional source of support for growth in the months ahead,” he said, adding
that the government may “start tightening policy from early 2010.”
The latest PMI number was higher than the median estimate of 54.7 in a
Bloomberg News survey of 10 economists. A reading above 50 indicates an
expansion. Today’s figure compares with a record-low 38.8 in November last
year, when recessions in the U.S., Europe and Japan sent export orders plunging.
Global Risks
China’s cabinet pledged Oct. 21 to continue monetary and fiscal stimulus even
after growth exceeded officials’ expectations for the first nine months of the
year. Commerce Minister Chen Deming warned yesterday that the global economy
may “plunge” if nations withdraw support measures too quickly.
A jump in the import index to 52.8 from 50.7 “shows an acceleration of domestic
demand,” Zhang said.
An output index rose to 59.3 in October from 58 in September and a measure of
new orders climbed to 58.5 from 56.8. An index of employment dropped to 52.4
from 53.2.
Surging auto sales, driven by tax cuts and subsidies, are boosting
manufacturing. Passenger-car purchases exceeded 1 million for the first time in
September as General Motors Co., the largest overseas automaker in China,
reported that sales doubled.
China will sustain its economic rebound this quarter and growth is likely to
top the government’s 8 percent target for 2009, the central bank said Oct. 30.
Biggest Winner
Policy makers need to “manage inflation expectations,” curb excess capacity and
encourage sustainable lending growth, the central bank said in its report on
the third-quarter economy.
Billionaire investor George Soros said Oct. 30 in Budapest that China will be
the “greatest winner” from the global financial crisis, with the U.S. losing
the most, leading to a shift in their positions that exceeds expectations.
Nobel Prize- winning economist Joseph Stiglitz said yesterday that emerging
economies including China need to guard against “bubbles” caused by the surge
in liquidity as governments around the world try to stimulate growth.
The manufacturing index, released by the logistics federation and the
Beijing-based National Bureau of Statistics, is based on replies to
questionnaires sent to purchasing executives at more than 730 companies in 20
industries. It was instituted in January 2005.