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CNA
38 minutes ago
- CNA
CNA938 Rewind - Can China sustain its 5% GDP growth target as US tariff risks mount?
China's GDP grew 5.2 per cent in the April to June quarter from a year earlier, slowing from 5.4 per cent in the first quarter, but just ahead of analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll for a rise of 5.1 per cent. Andrea Heng and Hairianto Diman speak with Sarah Tan, Assistant Director Economist at Moody's Analytics, to examine the factors that have contributed to this unexpected growth and whether China would be able to maintain its 5% GDP growth target in the face of a trade war.


International Business Times
2 hours ago
- International Business Times
Global Stocks Rise Ahead of Tariff Talks and U.S. Earnings, Inflation Data
Stocks worldwide rose on Tuesday, supported by tentative optimism ahead of an important week for U.S. corporate earnings and inflation data. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was up 0.8%, and Europe's STOXX 600 gained 0.2%. Nasdaq futures rise after Nvidia says it will recommence H20 chip sales to China, boosting the tech mood. Wall Street's trading day ended with slight gains. The Dow and S&P 500 added to modest gains, and the Nasdaq increased 0.25%. Investors are thus on tenterhooks about second-quarter earnings; S&P 500 profits are expected to rise 5.8% year-over-year, versus April's expectation of a 10.2% increase, before Trump's tariff brinkmanship. x Trump's Warnings on Tariffs Prompt Global Rebuke Over the weekend, President Trump indicated that 30% tariffs on EU and Mexican goods could kick in on August 1. However, he also expressed willingness to negotiate. The EU cautioned that retaliatory measures would be taken if no agreement were reached. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is scheduled to meet on Friday in Tokyo with Japan's Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba before the U.S. slaps on higher 25% tariffs. Mexico has not publicly responded, while upcoming elections in Japan could shake domestic politics. Japanese government bonds fell sharply, with the yield on the 10-year note spiking to 1.595 percent, a level not seen since 2008. Focus on Earnings and Inflation Data So far, markets are generally treating the tariff threats as background noise unless some tangible action is taken. What matters most to investors right now is the U.S. inflation report. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) for June is expected on Tuesday. Experts believe that Trump's new tariffs could soon start pushing prices higher. Meanwhile, Trump has again attacked Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. Analysts say Powell is increasingly feeling political pressure to cut interest rates more aggressively, although the Fed still has said it plans to be patient. Energy, Metals Circle on Geopolitical Tension Oil prices fell after Trump gave Russia a 30-day deadline to end the war in Ukraine or face new U.S. energy sanctions. Brent crude dropped 0.6 percent to $66.56 a barrel. Gold rose 0.5 percent to $3,358 an ounce, and silver gained 0.3 percent to $38.25, close to 2011 highs. The dollar was little changed at 147.62 yen. The euro rose 0.1 percent to $1.1680, snapping a four-day downward trend.

Straits Times
2 hours ago
- Straits Times
Beneath China's 5.2% economic growth, a life of pay cuts and side hustles
Find out what's new on ST website and app. While China has supported exports, the lack of demand has hit profits, in turn squeezing workers through wage cuts and forcing them to moonlight. BEIJING - Chinese state firm employee Zhang Jinming makes up for a 24 per cent cut to his salary by delivering food for three hours every night after work and on weekends - and hopes he can avoid awkward encounters with colleagues. 'Being a part-time delivery person while working for a state-owned enterprise isn't exactly considered respectable,' said Mr Zhang, whose real estate firm pays him 4,200 yuan (S$752) per month, down from 5,500 yuan. While China has supported economic growth by keeping its ports and factories humming, the lack of real demand has hit profits, in turn squeezing workers like Mr Zhang through wage cuts and forcing them to moonlight. 'There's just no other way,' added the 30-year-old, who rides his scooter until 11.30pm, making 60-70 yuan per evening. 'The pay cut has put me under huge pressure. Many colleagues have resigned and I took over their workload.' China's economy posted robust 5.2 per cent growth in the second quarter, showing its export-heavy model has so far withstood US tariffs. But beneath the headline resilience, cracks are widening. Contract and bill payment delays are rising, including among export champions like the autos and electronics industries and at utilities, whose owners, indebted local governments, have to run a tight shop while shoring up tariff-hit factories. Ferocious competition for a slice of external demand, hit by global trade tensions, is crimping industrial profits, fuelling factory-gate deflation even as export volumes climb. Workers bear the brunt of companies cutting costs. Falling profits and wages shrank tax revenues, pressuring state employers like Mr Zhang's to cut costs as well. In pockets of the financial system, non-performing loans are surging as authorities push banks to lend more. For the most part, the lopsided nature of growth in the world's second-largest economy is a product of policies that favour exporters over consumers. Economists have long urged Beijing to redirect support to domestically focused sectors, such as education and healthcare, or boost household consumption - for instance, by bolstering welfare - or risk a slowdown in the second half of the year. Max Zenglein, Asia-Pacific senior economist at the Conference Board of Asia, describes China as a 'dual-speed economy' with strong industry and weak consumption, noting the two are related. 'Some of the economic challenges including low profitability and deflationary pressure are largely driven by continued capacity expansion in the manufacturing and technology sectors,' said Zenglein. 'What's unfolding now' in the trade war with the United States is 'coming back home as a domestic issue.' Hit to incomes Frank Huang, a 28-year-old teacher in Chongzuo, a city of more than 2 million people near the Vietnam border, in the indebted Guangxi region, says his school has not paid him in two-to-three months, waiting for authorities to provide the funds. 'I can only endure, I don't dare to quit,' said Mr Huang, who relies on parents when his 5,000 yuan paycheck doesn't arrive. 'If I were married with a mortgage, car loan and child, the pressure would be unimaginable.' Another teacher from Linquan, a rural county of 1.5 million in eastern China, said she is only receiving her basic 3,000 yuan monthly salary. The performance-based part of her pay, usually about 16 per cent, 'has been consistently delayed.' 'After I pay for gas, parking and property management fees, what's left isn't enough for groceries,' said the teacher, who only gave her surname Yun for privacy reasons. 'I feel like begging,' added Ms Yun. 'If it weren't for my parents, I would starve.' There is no data on payment delays in the government sector. But among industrial firms, arrears have grown quickly in sectors with a strong state presence, either through industrial policy or - like in utilities - through direct ownership. Arrears in the computer, communication and electronic equipment sector and in autos manufacturing rose by 16.6 per cent and 11.2 per cent, respectively, in the year through May, faster than the 9 per cent average across industries. These figures suggest liquidity stress and are a side-effect of authorities prioritising output over demand, said Liao Minxiong, senior economist at Lombard APAC. 'The result should be slower growth for these champion sectors,' in the future, he said. Spending deferred With incomes under pressure, Beijing is struggling to meet its pledge to lift household consumption and worries are growing that persistent deflation will further damage the economy as consumers defer spending. Huang Tingting quit her waitress job last month after business at her restaurant - and most shops nearby - plummeted in April, at the height of US-China trade tensions. Responding to plunging revenues, the restaurant owner asked staff to take four unpaid leave days every month. 'I still have to pay rent and live my life,' said the 20-year-old from the eastern Jiangsu province, an export powerhouse that's outpacing national growth, explaining why she quit. In the past, though, she could find another restaurant job in a day or two. This time, she's been unemployed since June. One recruiter told her a job she applied for had more than 10 other candidates. 'The job market this year is worse than last year,' said Ms Huang. REUTERS