By Kevin Yao
BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s factories suffered
their fastest drop in activity in a year in April as new orders shrank, a
private business survey showed on Monday, hardening the case for fresh
stimulus measures to halt a slowdown in the world’s second-largest
economy.
The latest indication of deepening factory woes raises
the risk that second-quarter economic growth may dip below 7 percent for
the first time since the depths of the global crisis, adding to
official fears of job losses and local-level debt defaults.
The
HSBC/Markit Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 48.9 in April – the
lowest level since April 2014 – from 49.6 in March, as demand faltered
and deflationary pressures persisted.
The number was weaker than a
preliminary reading of 49.2, and below the 50-point level that
separates growth from contraction compared with the previous month.
“China’s
manufacturing sector had a weak start to Q2, with total new business
declining at the quickest rate in a year while production stagnated,”
said Annabel Fiddes, an economist at Markit.
“The PMI data
indicate that more stimulus measures may be required to ensure the
economy doesn’t slow from the 7 percent annual growth rate seen in Q1.”
The
overall new orders sub-index dipped to 48.7 in April, the sharpest
contraction in a year. That suggested a marked deterioration in domestic
demand, as new export orders showed tentative signs of improvement.
Both
input and output prices declined for a ninth month, while manufacturers
shed jobs for an 18th month, auguring poorly for an economy that grew
at its weakest rate for six years in the first quarter.
An
official survey released on Friday showed China’s factories struggled to
grow in April as domestic and export demand remained weak. The official
number of 50.1 was the weakest reading for the month of April since the
data started in 2005, HSBC noted.
The private survey focuses on small and mid-sized firms, while the official one looks at larger, state-owned companies.
China will release its April economic data over the coming weeks, starting with trade on Friday.
GROWTH COOLING
Aside
from weakness in the manufacturing sector, China is struggling with a
downturn in its property market, slowing investment and high levels of
domestic debt.
On Thursday, the Politburo, the ruling Communist
Party’s top decision-making body, said that authorities will step up
policy “adjustments” and urged further tax cuts. It also said the
government must resolve financing glitches that are holding up big
infrastructure projects.
Analysts believe the Politburo’s emphasis
on stabilizing growth signaled top leaders’ increasing concerns about a
sharper slowdown.
Economic growth is expected to slow further to
6.8 percent in the second quarter from 7 percent in the previous
quarter, the State Information Center, a top government think tank, said
in a research report published on Monday.
Millions of workers
lost their jobs when China’s growth tumbled to 6.6 percent in early
2009. A massive stimulus package pulled the economy out of the slump,
but at the cost of saddling local governments with a mountain of debt.
The
think-tank, which is affiliated to the National Development and Reform
Commision, the top planning agency, called for interest rate cuts of 50
basis points in the first half, coupled with reductions in banks’
reserves requirements.
The People’s Bank of China last cut benchmark interest rates by 25 bps on Feb. 28 – its second cut since November.
The
central bank has also reduced banks’ reserve requirements (RRR) twice
this year, by a total of 150 basis points, in a bid to boost their
lending power, while home purchase rules have been eased to help the
real estate market.
The think-tank also urged the government to
lower the yuan currency’s real effective exchange rate by 1-2 percent
this year to help boost exports.
“Underlying economic activity
appears to have slowed further from March, warranting more aggressive
easing measures in the coming weeks in order for the economy to
stabilize toward mid-year,” Julia Wang, China economist at HSBC, said in
a note.
Wang also expects a 25-bps rate cut in the second quarter.
Most
economists believe China’s economic growth could cool to a
quarter-century low of around 7 percent this year from 7.4 percent in
2014.
(Reporting by Kevin Yao; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore & Kim Coghill)
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