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"The official Purchasing Managers' Index edged down to 50.2 in February from January's 50.5, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Saturday, just ahead of market expectations of 50.1.

A PMI reading above 50 indicates expanding activity while one below that level points to a contraction.

A preliminary survey released last week by HSBC and Markit Economics showed that the factory sector activity hit a seven-month low of 48.3 from 49.5 in January."

So what is January's PMI? 50.5 or 48.3? Because if it is the latter, then February PMI is by no means an eight month low and if it is former, then January would have been doing extremely well comparing to 2013. Take your pick really.

Of course, despite it is dated March 1, this is actually an old article because I saw it on CNN in mid-February. Which means this "February" data in fact covered primarily late January with a few days from February attached, basically the entire length of the spring festival.
 
airbus.ashx

Airbus Tianjin's General Manager Andreas Ockel briefs French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius (in black overcoat) and his delegation during a visit to the Airbus factory in Tianjin, China, Feb 24, 2014. Fabius is in Beijing to make preparations for Chinese President Xi Jinping's trip to France in March

TIANJIN - In a series of vast hangars, dozens of Chinese technicians swarm over fuselages of Airbus A320 planes, foot soldiers in the battle to dominate what will become the world's largest aircraft market.

The nearly completed aircraft at the Airbus assembly plant in the northern city of Tianjin, an hour outside Beijing, are resplendent in the livery of their Chinese airline buyers.

Since it opened in 2008, the plant has effectively acted as a showcase for Airbus's wares and given the European manufacturer an advantage as it competes with US arch-rival Boeing to dominate Chinese aircraft sales, Airbus officials said.

Early controversy over technology transfer, the safety of the aircraft assembled at the plant and comparatively lower salaries of Chinese workers appears to be forgotten.

Now negotiations to extend the joint venture beyond its original 10-year shelf life are entering the final stages.

"The Tianjin site is an expensive investment, but you have to have a global vision and look at what it brings us," said Eric Chen, president of Airbus China.

"Since we decided to set up here, our market share in China has gone from 25% to 50%," he told journalists on a visit to the plant, the only Airbus assembly plant outside Europe.

Some 20% of the worldwide production of Airbus already goes to China.

For now, it still lags Boeing in terms of final deliveries in the country, sending 133 aircraft to clients last year – 10 fewer than the US firm.

But its 1,000th Chinese delivery took place on Dec 23, 28 years after the first in 1985. Now it is aiming to achieve its second 1,000 deliveries by 2020.

It is a conservative goal given the boom in Chinese air traffic, Chen said. According to Boeing's projections, the Chinese civil aviation fleet will triple over the next 20 years.

Airbus only started winning large Chinese orders after the memorandum of understanding for the Tianjin plant was agreed in 2005, Chen said.

"This is what has made the difference" in the fight against Boeing, he added.

Around 160 medium-range A320 aircraft have so far been assembled in Tianjin, which now produces four of them a month, and there are plans to adapt it to produce the more fuel-efficient A320neo aircraft in the future.

When it opened it had 133 foreign employees, a figure that now stands at 32.

Will Horton, a senior analyst for CAPA Centre of Aviation in Hong Kong, said it was a mutually beneficial relationship.

"Airbus is growing its share of the Chinese market, and China rightfully sees pride and value in having a local assembly line," he told AFP. "Local final assembly means more of the aircraft's value is kept in China."

On Wednesday, Airbus reported net profit of €1.5bil (US$2.05bil) for last year, up 22%. The company said it took orders worth €218.7bil with its global order book now worth a record €686.7bil.

Airbus has a 51% share in the joint venture and a consortium of Chinese investors including state-owned aircraft manufacturer AVIC holds 49%. The deal was originally agreed to extend till 2016.

"Discussions are underway to renew and significantly deepen this partnership," French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said this week after visiting the plant.

Chen told AFP he was "confident" a deal would be reached in time for signature when Chinese President Xi Jinping visits France in late March. But some aspects were still being negotiated, he said, declining to give details. – AFP

Airbus China plant opens door to massive market - Business News | The Star Online
 
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Seeing the imminent arrival of COMAC‘s C919,Airbus is looking into the consolidation and expansion of its market position in China by proposing to set up an A330 Completion Centre there。


Airbus Offers To Build A330 Completion Center In China

By Bradley Perrett

A330DragonairSpecialLivery-AIRBUS.jpg

February 04, 2014
Credit: Airbus

Airbus is offering to build an A330 completion center in China, probably in Tianjin, says a manufacturing industry official, as the European airframer steps up efforts to promote the type as an answer to China’s shortage of pilots, technicians and airspace capacity.

In return for the completion center, Airbus is asking China to commit to buying a large number of A330s, possibly 200, says the official.

The Chinese government, which heavily influences aircraft purchase by the mainly state-owned airline industry, is still considering the offer. The proposal has accompanied Airbus attempts to promote lightweight certification of the A330 as creating a Chinese version of the type, while Boeing is arguing that narrowbodies offer better economics for China’s domestic routes.

The offer completion center has apparently been made as part of talks for orders to fill requirements for the next five-year planning period, 2016-20, although the facility and its deliveries would presumably last longer than that.


To read the full article, log in to the Aviation Week Intelligence Network.
 
Hope the National People's Congress and the Chinese Political Consultative Conference sessions bring out more incentives to economy development and then the stock market.
 
you know what I noticed, if it's a developed country like US, Japan, or something, it's always, look revival in the economy if even the tiniest crap happens, when it goes south it's always, but it will pick back up soon.

With China it's always, China grew a robust ---, but.... China exceeds expectation, however......

lol, and the western media wonders why we don't like them. Maybe China should really create a 50 cent army just to post crap about the west, see how they like it.
The problem is that the (Western) media sees the world through a ideological narrative. In this narrative there are the good guys and there are the bad guys. China at the moment falls firmly in the latter category. What that means is that they see what they want to see. And they end up overlooking the positives of their opponents and overlook the weakness of their friends and themselves. The last one is the most dangerous and damaging to the West in my view. Right now the West is underestimating their own problems and are overestimating their own ability to deal with them. Its a form of self delusion.
 

China's non-manufacturing PMI rebounds


English.news.cn 2014-03-03 14:38:09

BEIJING, March 3 (Xinhua) -- The purchasing managers' index (PMI) for China's non-manufacturing sector rebounded in February after dropping for three consecutive months, new data showed on Monday.

The index rose 1.6 percentage points from January to 55 percent last month, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing (CFLP).

The index tracks activity in non-manufacturing sectors, including construction, software, aviation, railway transport and real estate. A PMI reading above 50 percent indicates expansion, while a reading below 50 percent reflects contraction.

CFLP Vice Chairman Cai Jin attributed the rebound mainly to robust business activities after the Spring Festival, China's lunar new year.

"Rising activities, especially in service sectors, laid a solid foundation for steady economic growth," Cai said.

The index for service sectors surged 2.3 percentage points to 53.8 percent, the data showed.

The sub-index for new orders edged up 0.5 percentage points from a month earlier to 51.4 percent, marking the first rebound in five months, according to the NBS.

Meanwhile, the index for intermediary prices dropped for a second month in February to 52.1 percent, indicating narrowing growth.

The sub-index for charges dropped 1.1 percentage points to 49 percent, while the index for business outlook rebounded 1.8 percentage points to 59.9 percent.

The new data painted a different picture compared with the weak performance of the country's manufacturing sector during the same period.

China's manufacturing PMI retreated to an eight-month low of 50.2 percent in February, slowing for a third straight month, the NBS revealed on Saturday.

HSBC data also showed on Monday that the HSBC China Manufacturing PMI fell to a seven-month low of 48.5 percent last month, signaling a moderate deterioration in the health of China's manufacturing sector.

Commenting on the figure, HSBC's chief China economist Qu Hongbin said signs are becoming clear that "the risks to GDP growth are tilting to the downside."

This calls for policy fine-tuning measures to stabilize market expectations and steady the pace of growth in the coming quarters, he said.

China's non-manufacturing PMI rebounds - Xinhua | English.news.cn
 
Without outside orders, the dark of the Moon would be revealed
 
Don‘t worry,China's factory production will continue to expand at annual rate of some 10% while India’s will probably continue to contract in the months ahead。

That's the beauty of PMI。:D

In the meantime:


China's non-manufacturing PMI rebounds


English.news.cn 2014-03-03 14:38:09

BEIJING, March 3 (Xinhua) -- The purchasing managers' index (PMI) for China's non-manufacturing sector rebounded in February after dropping for three consecutive months, new data showed on Monday.


The index rose 1.6 percentage points from January to 55 percent last month, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing (CFLP).

The index tracks activity in non-manufacturing sectors, including construction, software, aviation, railway transport and real estate. A PMI reading above 50 percent indicates expansion, while a reading below 50 percent reflects contraction.

CFLP Vice Chairman Cai Jin attributed the rebound mainly to robust business activities after the Spring Festival, China's lunar new year.

"Rising activities, especially in service sectors, laid a solid foundation for steady economic growth," Cai said.

The index for service sectors surged 2.3 percentage points to 53.8 percent, the data showed.

The sub-index for new orders edged up 0.5 percentage points from a month earlier to 51.4 percent, marking the first rebound in five months, according to the NBS.

Meanwhile, the index for intermediary prices dropped for a second month in February to 52.1 percent, indicating narrowing growth.

The sub-index for charges dropped 1.1 percentage points to 49 percent, while the index for business outlook rebounded 1.8 percentage points to 59.9 percent.

The new data painted a different picture compared with the weak performance of the country's manufacturing sector during the same period.

China's manufacturing PMI retreated to an eight-month low of 50.2 percent in February, slowing for a third straight month, the NBS revealed on Saturday.

HSBC data also showed on Monday that the HSBC China Manufacturing PMI fell to a seven-month low of 48.5 percent last month, signaling a moderate deterioration in the health of China's manufacturing sector.

Commenting on the figure, HSBC's chief China economist Qu Hongbin said signs are becoming clear that "the risks to GDP growth are tilting to the downside."

This calls for policy fine-tuning measures to stabilize market expectations and steady the pace of growth in the coming quarters, he said.

China's non-manufacturing PMI rebounds - Xinhua | English.news.cn
 
China economy is going down badly, more hungry people are becoming 'terroris' bcz they r angry with corrupted Govt..

Thats what I always try to tell u guys, but u guys keep ignoring and lying instead. :dirol:
 
China economy is going down badly, more hungry people are becoming 'terroris' bcz they r angry with corrupted Govt..

Thats what I always try to tell u guys, but u guys keep ignoring and lying instead. :dirol:

Are you a typical product of the Vietnamese education system?

If yes,you and your country are as good as written-off。:D
 
Are you a typical product of the Vietnamese education system?

If yes,you and your country are as good as written-off。:D
Whatever, 'China terrorist' is the product of ur incompetent Govt. when they lead China economy to the abys.

Trust me, with ur worsen economy, u will see more 'terrorist' chopping off ur people :dirol:
 
China environment ministry approves two Westinghouse reactors
BEIJING Thu Feb 27, 2014 10:40pm EST


BEIJING Feb 28 (Reuters) - China's environment ministry has given the initial go-ahead for the construction of two new AP1000 nuclear reactors designed by U.S.-based Westinghouse in the eastern coastal province of Shandong, it said late on Thursday.

The Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP) said the proposed new reactors at the Haiyang nuclear facility in the city of Yantai will cost a total of 31.4 billion yuan ($5.1 billion), invested by state-owned utility China Power Investment.

The ministry published the project's 395-page environmental impact assessment in full on its website (中华人民共和国环境保护部 and said it is open to further suggestions and opinions from the public until March 5.

China will be the first country to build Westinghouse's third-generation reactor model, with two units already in construction at Haiyang and another two being built at the Sanmen facility in Zhejiang province.

The first unit at Haiyang was originally due to go into full operation late this year, but an industry source said next year was now a more realistic timeframe.

China is planning to raise its total nuclear installed capacity to 58 gigawatts (GW) by the end of 2020, up from 14.6 GW at the end of 2013. It currently has a total of 31 reactor units under construction with a total capacity of 33.85 GW, 8.6 GW of which is expected to go into operation in 2014.

The country's top energy official, Wu Xinxiong, told a national government meeting in January that China would "launch approvals of key nuclear projects" this year.

After a tsunami in northeast Japan left the Fukushima reactor complex close to meltdown in 2011, China conducted a nationwide safety check and promised to build only safer third-generation models like the AP1000 and the European Pressurised Reactor (EPR) developed by France's Areva .

China is currently building two EPRs in southeastern Guangdong province.

China's own third-generation model, known as the CAP1400, is based on Westinghouse's AP1000 design and was given preliminary approval by the National Energy Administration last month.

Westinghouse, owned by Japan's Toshiba, has been working with Chinese partners like the State Nuclear Power Technology Company (SNPTC) to develop local supply chains and the collaboration will allow the two sides to make joint bids for nuclear projects overseas, the U.S. energy secretary Ernest Moniz told reporters in Beijing last October.

China environment ministry approves two Westinghouse reactors| Reuters
 
Wuxi: the first city in Yangtze River Delta Region that has a GDP per capita over 20,000 US dollars

Statistical Communiqué of Wuxi on the 2013 city Economic and Social Development:

2013年无锡市国民经济和社会发展统计公报--苏南频道--人民网

GDP 2013:807 billion yuan
Per capita GDP 2013:124600 yuan

I was always under the impression that Wuxi's sister city,Suzhou,was the richest among the 13 prefecture-level cities of Jiangsu Province。

Ok,Suzhou has the highest GDP,but per capita wise,Wuxi leads the pack in Jiangsu。:enjoy:
 
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