By Ian Chua
SYDNEY (Reuters) – Growth in China’s services
sector picked up in June while big Japanese companies planned to ramp up
spending at the fastest pace in a decade, offering hope that prospects
are improving for Asia’s largest economies despite sluggish factory
growth.
Wednesday’s data fueled expectations that the wobbly
global economy may start leveling out in the second half of the year,
but the outlook remains murky, with fears that Greece’s debt crisis
could splinter the euro zone and worries about whether China can avoid a
stock market crash keeping investors on edge.
Activity in China’s
factory sector expanded slightly in June though not as much as
expected, official surveys showed, suggesting the economy may be
starting to slowly level out after a raft of support measures including
interest rate cuts and more infrastructure spending.
Japanese
factories barely expanded but a private report showed a strong pick-up
in export orders, while a Bank of Japan survey showed a strong bounce in
business confidence and spending plans, a welcome sign for premier
Shinzo Abe’s economic revival strategy which has seen limited success in
nudging firms to boost wages and investment.
“When you have two
of the biggest economies in the world showing positive readings, that is
encouraging. They also come on the back of some good readings out of
the United States,” said Craig James, chief economist at CommSec in
Sydney.
Yet reports from South Korea, Taiwan and Indonesia
provided a more sobering read that still pointed to challenging
conditions for many economies in the region.
The unending uncertainty over Greece also dampened confidence, though Asian markets held up well on Wednesday.
Similar activity surveys are due from Europe and the United States later in the day.
Though
Greece makes up only about 2 percent of the euro zone economy, fears of
contagion to other weak EU members could overshadow recent signs that
businesses are in better shape.
In the U.S., the ISM factory PMI
is expected to accelerate, reinforcing views the Federal Reserve could
start raising interest rates in September, though a healthier U.S.
economy is not giving as big a boost to Asia’s exports as in the past.
H2 BOUNCE OR DEJU VU ALL OVER AGAIN?
To
be sure, Asian exporters and global policymakers have made the same bad
calls over and over again in past years, betting that advanced
economies will recover strongly, but sustained turnarounds have
repeatedly proved elusive.
China’s official manufacturing
Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) for June came in at 50.2, unchanged from
May, while the services PMI climbed to 53.8 from 53.2 in May, above the
50 level that is supposed to separate growth from contraction.
“It
basically highlights there is some degree of stabilization happening
and it’s very much in line with what the authorities want to see,”
CommSec’s James added.
Analysts at ANZ, though, suspect softness in the manufacturing sector would require more policy easing.
“Looking
ahead, as real interest rates faced by Chinese companies remain
elevated, we see that further monetary easing is still highly needed,”
Liu Li-Gang and Zhou Hao at ANZ wrote in a research note.
On
Saturday, China’s central bank cut lending rates for the fourth time
since November and trimmed the amount of cash that some banks must hold
as reserves. The dual central bank action was the first since the height
of the global financial crisis in late 2008.
In contrast,
conditions in export-reliant South Korea continued to deteriorate, with
exports falling for a sixth straight month in June and manufacturing
activity shrinking at the fastest pace in nearly three years.
Adding
to the country’s woeful performance is the outbreak of the deadly
Middle East Respiratory Syndrome since late May, which has prompted some
analysts to trim their economic growth forecast for the year and pushed
the government to announce a $ 13 billion fiscal stimulus package last
week.
Analysts at Barclays were more upbeat.
“We see some
silver linings that could pave the way for Korean exports to stabilize
in Q3,” they wrote in a note to clients, citing a strong rise in U.S.
consumer confidence and signs that its shipments to China appeared to be
bottoming.
Much might depend on whether China tames its volatile
share market, which has plunged 20 percent from its peaks in early June,
and whether its housing market can take a stronger turn in the second
half of the year.
While home sales and prices have picked up in
the biggest Chinese cities, investment remains weak with high local
government debt levels and bureaucratic delays thwarting Beijing’s
efforts to get big infrastructure projects off the ground.
(Additional
reporting by Kevin Yao in BEIJING, Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto
in TOKYO, Christine Kim in SEOUL; Editing by Kim Coghill)
Brought to you by www.srnnews.com
SRN News » Business
No comments:
Post a Comment