What's new

China August factory activity shrinks to six and a half year low as orders tumble

F-22Raptor

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Jun 19, 2014
Messages
16,980
Reaction score
3
Country
United States
Location
United States
Activity in China's factory sector shrank at its fastest pace in almost 6-1/2 years in August as domestic and export demand dwindled, a private survey showed, adding to worries that the world's second-largest economy may be slowing sharply.

China's surprise devaluation of the yuan last week and a near-collapse in its stock markets in early summer have sparked fears that it could be at risk of a hard landing which would hammer global growth, sending financial markets into a tailspin.

Japanese Economics Minister Akira Amari said on Friday he expected China's government to take steps to prevent its economic slowdown from becoming a global problem.

The preliminary Caixin/Markit China Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) stood at 47.1 in August, well below a Reuters poll median of 47.7 and down from July's final 47.8.

The reading was the worst since March 2009, in the depths of the global financial crisis, and the sixth straight one below the 50-point level, which separates growth in activity from contraction on a monthly basis.

The flash PMI, the earliest economic measure to be released about China each month, is closely followed by global investors for clues on the health of the economy.

A detailed breakdown of the activity survey showed conditions were deteriorating on almost every level, with factory output sinking to a near four-year low, domestic and export orders declining at a faster rate than in July and companies laying off more workers.

U.S. Federal Reserve policymakers discussed China, Greece's debt crisis and the weak state of the global economy at their last meeting in July, according to minutes of the meeting released this week. But analysts still expect the U.S. central bank to raise interest rates later this year.

U.S. stock futures SPc1 fell sharply after the PMI report and most Asian stock markets and the Australian dollar AUD=D4 extended early losses. Overnight on Wall Street, the S&P 500 .SPX sank to a more than six-month low on concerns about how China's slowdown would impact global growth.

GROWING RISKS

Chinese authorities have struggled to stabilize the country's stock markets after a near-collapse in early summer, and stunned financial markets this month by devaluing the yuan CNY=CFXS by nearly 2 percent.

The central bank said the yuan move was a technical one and part of a reform process, but many investors fear the currency will be allowed to depreciate further amid political pressure to shore up flagging exports, potentially triggering a global currency war.

The gloomy PMI figure followed other official data last week that showed growth in China's factory output, investment and retail sales were all weaker than expected in July, dashing hopes that the economy was finally stabilizing after a flurry of support measures over the last year, including four interest rate cuts and a massive stock market rescue.

Analysts have warned that China will struggle to meet its official economic growth target of 7 percent this year if it doesn't ratchet up policy support to combat cooling activity.

Some economists believe current growth levels are already closer to half that.

New orders, a proxy for local and foreign demand, slumped to a three-year low. New export orders fared almost as badly, shrinking to their worst level since June 2013.

A dearth in new business caused factory output to shrink for a fourth consecutive month to hit a trough of 46.6, a level not seen since November 2011 and down from July's 47.1.

As sales sag, the survey showed factories were cutting staff at a faster pace to rein in costs, depressing employment to a level not seen since the 2008/09 global crisis.

With demand so lackluster, factories struggled again with deflationary pressure. Input prices fell for the 13th straight month, reflecting lower commodities prices, but output prices slid at their fastest rate in seven months as manufacturers were forced to slash prices amid fiercer competition.

SOFT OUTLOOK

The latest PMI will reinforce bets that China must increase government spending, cut interest rates again and relax banks' reserve requirements to get the economy back on an even keel.

To worsen matters, Chinese financial markets have suffered unprecedented turbulence lately, further denting investor and consumer confidence.

Chinese shares tanked as much as a third during a selloff last month. That shakeout also raised fears of a tighter credit supply for companies, as state-controlled banks shifted their funding priorities to supporting the stock market instead.

Equity and currency markets have also been hit by volatility after the yuan devaluation.

A devastating explosion last week in the northern port of Tianjin, the world's 10th largest, flattened a big industrial area, though analysts at Capital Economics estimated disruptions on a national level to be "transitory and small".

China August factory activity shrinks to six and a half year low as orders tumble| Reuters
 
We will see a global economic meltdown as soon as 2016 and no one will survive this time..

China simply needs more time to reform, at least 2 more yrs. so I am not very optimistic
 
No kidding, the Dow fell 350 points today.

Seems to me that the inter-dependencies of the Chinese, Japanese and American economies is being felt.

The recent Chinese stock market rout seems to be felt broad....
 
We will see a global economic meltdown as soon as 2016 and no one will survive this time..

China simply needs more time to reform, at least 2 more yrs. so I am not very optimistic
2 years seems like quite a long time.
 
The Chinese economy showed little evidence of stabilization in July. While maintaining our GDP growth forecast of 6.8% for this year, we are cutting our estimates of official GDP growth rates to 6.3% for 2016 and 6.5% for 2017 (from 6.7% and 7.1%, respectively, last month) to reflect slow economic and policy adjustments. The YoY pace of growth in 1H 2016 will be particularly challenging due to base effects for the service sector. We continue to expect the political cycle may turn favorable to growth (i.e., less negative spillovers of anti-corruption) from 2H-2016. Our downgrade also assumes that the growth target in the upcoming 13th Five Year Plan (2016-2020) will be reduced from 7.0% to 6.5% or even 6%. This should create almost no material impact on the economy, given that we have argued for a while that the actual growth rate was around 5% (or perhaps even lower) in 1H, and the growth can at best stabilize at that level in 2H”.

Read more: Citi: China could lower its growth target for 2016 to just 6% - Business Insider
 
2 years seems like quite a long time.
That‘s because the reform went too slow..there are already too much stakes and vested interests in it so the reform won't be like a hot knife though butter.

The world really need a new growth engine to survive the coming crisis,since the US Fed are already out of ammunition after 3 QE and China simply cannot build more ghost cities.. India was hyped up but sadly I dont' see a rapid urbanization happening there or anywhere else,I foresee a 2016 crisis.
 
That‘s because the reform went too slow..there are already too much stakes and vested interests in it so the reform won't be like a hot knife though butter.

The world really need a new growth engine to survive the coming crisis,since the US Fed are already out of ammunition after 3 QE and China simply cannot build more ghost cities.. India was hyped up but sadly I dont' see a rapid urbanization happening there or anywhere else,I foresee a 2016 crisis.
All jibes apart, an economy like china growing at even 6% is pretty phenomenal. :)
 
Buyers of stocks were few and far between. Selling outweighed buying by a ratio of more than eight to one in heavy trading. Still, even with the sell-off, the S&P 500 was down just 4.5 percent from its record close of 2,130.82 on May 21.

As the selling picked up Thursday, investors moved money to traditional havens in times of uncertainty.

Gold rose $25.30, or 2.2 percent, to $1,153.20 an ounce, the metal's best day since April. Demand for ultra-safe U.S. government bonds rose, pulling down the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note to 2.07 percent from 2.13 late Wednesday. The 10-year's yield stood at 2.19 percent only two days before, and its decline since then represents a major decline.

Worries over China, the world's second-largest economy, spurred Thursday's losses. The Shanghai Composite Index dropped 3.4 percent. Chinese shares have had a wild ride this week and that has raised questions about Beijing's ability to stabilize the market and the devaluation of that nation's currency.

The move has caused other countries to devalue their own currencies, notably oil-rich Kazakhstan and the manufacturing hub of Vietnam.

Strategists and traders, noting the lack of major U.S. economic news on Thursday, said the drop in stocks was also likely tied to programmed selling, which came after the S&P 500 moved below one of its most closely watched indicators, a 200-day moving average.

While many investors buy and sell stocks based on a company's business outlook, there is a different class of trader who relies on such technical indicators to make investment decisions.

"I see this drop as likely because we crossed the 200-day moving average, and that's causing us to have further selling," said Scott Wren, chief global equity strategist at the Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

Media stocks were hit particularly hard. Walt Disney shares fell $6.43, or 6 percent, to $100.02. Analysts are concerned that viewers are moving away from cable, which could hurt lucrative Disney properties such as ESPN.

Viacom, owner of CBS, fell 6 percent as well while Twenty-First Century Fox slipped 4 percent.

The year's biggest winners also were hit hard, possibly a sign that investors feel the seven-year bull market for stocks might be slowing down. Netflix, which is up about 130 percent since January, fell 8 percent. Gilead Sciences dipped 3 percent and Google declined 2 percent.

The price of benchmark U.S. oil rose slightly but remains near its low point of March 2009. U.S. crude rose 34 cents to $41.14 in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many U.S. refineries, fell 54 cents to $46.62 in London.

In other futures trading, wholesale gasoline fell 2.4 cents to close at $1.535 a gallon. Heating oil fell 2.2 cents to close at $1.496 a gallon. Natural gas rose 3.9 cents to close at $2.755 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In metals, silver rose 34 cents to $15.52 an ounce and copper rose 4 cents to $2.32 a pound.
 
Back
Top Bottom