logo
China's Stimulus Outlook Clouded by Surprise Economic Strength

China's Stimulus Outlook Clouded by Surprise Economic Strength

Yahoo2 days ago
(Bloomberg) -- China's economy surprised with signs of improvement even as deflationary pressures persisted and employment weakened, throwing fresh doubt over the likelihood of further monetary stimulus by Beijing in the face of higher US tariffs.
Philadelphia Transit System Votes to Cut Service by 45%, Hike Fares
Squeezed by Crowds, the Roads of Central Park Are Being Reimagined
Sao Paulo Pushes Out Favela Residents, Drug Users to Revive Its City Center
Sprawl Is Still Not the Answer
Mapping the Architectural History of New York's Chinatown
Factory activity and construction had their strongest month of the second quarter in June, according to China's official purchasing managers' indexes released on Monday. The official manufacturing PMI remained in contraction but reached 49.7 from 49.5 in May — exceeding forecasts along with a measure of construction and services.
Yet behind the headline figures was a more mixed picture of the world's second-biggest economy that left the market unsure of if and when policymakers might step up stimulus efforts. Traders dialed back bets on further monetary easing after the data release, with futures on 30-year government bonds falling as much as 0.6% — the most in a month.
'Overall, the better PMI data point to still decent momentum in the second quarter,' said Michelle Lam, Greater China economist at Societe Generale SA. 'But the weak employment indices put the sustainability of consumption recovery in doubt without more support later in the year.'
A tariff truce with the US has led to a rebound in trade, contributing to a broad improvement in new orders for factories, builders and service providers. The latest PMI reading captured the first full month after Beijing and Washington agreed to a 90-day pause in their trade war.
At the same time, sales prices are continuing to drop despite narrowing their decline across the sectors. What's more, manufacturing employment weakened, illustrating the weakness of domestic demand and the vulnerabilities still lurking in the labor market.
What Bloomberg Economics Says ...
'Further employment shrinkage and the weakest confidence since the government's growth pivot last September highlight the lack of confidence beyond the immediate future. That's likely due to the mid-August expiration of the China-US trade truce. The government has continued to support the economy, as seen the acceleration in construction, but may hold back fresh stimulus until the latter part of 3Q.'
— Chang Shu and David Qu. Click here to read the full report.
With the People's Bank of China issuing a more optimistic assessment of the economy after its latest policy meeting, analysts are debating whether authorities will roll out fresh measures in support of growth in the coming three months. Some argue the urgency has decreased in the near term, as the pace of expansion stays on track to hit the official target of around 5% in the second quarter.
Among factories, the new orders index expanded for the first time in three months, though a gauge of employment worsened again after a slight improvement in May. Among the 21 industries surveyed, more than half were in expansion territory, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.
The Chinese economy has held up well over the past three months as it went through a rollercoaster ride of erratic decisions by President Donald Trump, who would hike tariffs only to have them suspended later.
Exports kept growing, however, as overseas clients front-loaded orders, while a government subsidy program for consumer products pushed retail sales growth to the fastest since 2023. The Chinese government's earlier issuance of bonds this year also supported robust infrastructure investment and construction.
Persistent deflation and weak consumer demand have shadowed the economy throughout the trade war. Property prices are struggling to bottom out, weighing on household wealth and confidence.
The economic cross-currents are likely to complicate policymaking in the months ahead.
The PBOC highlighted the recent improvement in its statement on Friday while also drawing attention to problems including insufficient demand and low consumer prices.
The central bank vowed to use a flexible approach when deciding the pace of policies. It last cut interest rates and the reserve requirement ratio — which determines the amount of cash banks must set in reserves — in May.
'The economy shows a positive trend, and social confidence continues to increase,' the PBOC said.
The central bank's view indicates 'a less dovish tone' compared with the previous quarterly meeting and 'signals limited appetite for significant easing in the near term,' Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economists wrote in a note on Saturday.
They expect a 10-basis point policy rate cut and a reduction of half a percentage point in the RRR during the fourth quarter, when they anticipate a significant slowdown in economic growth.
Others argue that the PBOC may ease monetary policy as soon as next quarter in order to ensure the economy stays on the right track.
'Policymakers might recognize that to sustain the growth momentum and counter subdued price levels, some modest easing might be needed,' said Jacqueline Rong, chief China economist at BNP Paribas, who expects the PBOC to cut the policy rate by 10 basis points in August.
Societe Generale's Lam sees a possible window for additional stimulus in late third quarter, though it could be delayed to the subsequent three months.
Apart from monetary easing, China could also make use of policy banks to inject new money for infrastructure. Authorities planned to let them raise 500 billion yuan ($70 billion) of capital to buy stakes in infrastructure projects, Bloomberg News reported in May.
Additional fiscal stimulus is another possibility, though its shape is even less clear and will likely require a significant slowdown in growth.
Economists at Morgan Stanley said Beijing may introduce 'a modest' supplementary fiscal infusion of up to 1 trillion yuan in the late third quarter or the start of the last three months of the year, 'when it sees two-three months of weaker hard data.'
The strength of Chinese manufacturing in the rest of the year also remains in question given an unpredictable outlook for exports, with a more lasting trade deal still elusive.
Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect gross domestic product to expand 4.5% this year, significantly below the official target of around 5%.
'The question for policymakers are deflation and joblessness instead of growth,' said Raymond Yeung, chief economist for Greater China at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. . 'I am not worried about China's GDP.'
--With assistance from James Mayger and Wenjin Lv.
(Updates throughouot.)
America's Top Consumer-Sentiment Economist Is Worried
How to Steal a House
Inside Gap's Last-Ditch, Tariff-Addled Turnaround Push
Apple Test-Drives Big-Screen Movie Strategy With F1
Does a Mamdani Victory and Bezos Blowback Mean Billionaires Beware?
©2025 Bloomberg L.P.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hong Kong to regain IPO crown this year, say PwC and Deloitte
Hong Kong to regain IPO crown this year, say PwC and Deloitte

Yahoo

time12 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Hong Kong to regain IPO crown this year, say PwC and Deloitte

Hong Kong is expected to lead the world in IPO financing this year despite uncertainty from geopolitical tensions and trade tariffs, accountancy giant PwC said on Wednesday. The Chinese financial hub's capital market has rebounded strongly this year, with dozens of Chinese companies piling into the city to raise overseas capital despite regulatory pressure from Beijing and uncertainty over its national security laws. PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) said its statistics suggest nearly 100 companies will raise at least HK$200 billion ($25.5 billion) in Hong Kong this year. It said Hong Kong's IPO wave has benefited largely from policy support from the Chinese government and optimised listing rules by Hong Kong regulators that include streamlining approval processes. "The improved market liquidity and rising international investor demand for core Chinese assets also drove market activity," PwC's Hong Kong capital markets leader Eddie Wong said in a note. The Hong Kong stock exchange welcomed 44 IPOs by the end of June, according to PwC. "We expect 2025 to be the most active fundraising year for IPOs in the past four years," said Diamantina Leong, PwC's Hong Kong capital markets services partner. PwC said total proceeds raised in Hong Kong jumped 701 percent to HK$107.1 billion (US$13.7 billion) compared to the same period last year. In comparison, the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq have raised HK$55.3 billion ($7.0 billion) and HK$71.9 billion ($9.2 billion) in IPOs respectively so far this year, it said. Hong Kong's IPO boom is expected to continue into the first half of next year, Wong told reporters at a presentation. Data from the Hong Kong stock exchange showed it is processing more than 170 listing applications. "We expect strong momentum to continue, supported by several mega deals," Wong said. Many of the world's biggest fund-raisings by Chinese companies, including battery giant CATL, pharmaceutical firm Jiangsu Hengrui and soy sauce maker Foshan Haitian, kept up the buzz in Hong Kong's capital markets. Consulting firm Deloitte also forecast in a June report that Hong Kong would be the IPO leader this year, although its analysts warned that "adverse geopolitical or macroeconomic disruptions" could constrain optimism. Chinese e-commerce titan Shein is switching to Hong Kong to complete its debut after failing to list in New York and London, Bloomberg reported this year. Hong Kong hopes to become the preferred listing platform for international companies, "especially those that find it challenging to access capital markets in the US or Europe", the city's financial secretary Paul Chan said last month. twa/mtp

Foxconn tells hundreds of Chinese staff to return from its Indian iPhone factories
Foxconn tells hundreds of Chinese staff to return from its Indian iPhone factories

TechCrunch

time13 minutes ago

  • TechCrunch

Foxconn tells hundreds of Chinese staff to return from its Indian iPhone factories

In Brief Apple's biggest assembly partner Foxconn has ordered more than 300 of its Chinese employees to return home from its iPhone factories in India, Bloomberg reported, citing anonymous sources. The employees told to return account for the bulk of Foxconn's staff in its iPhone facilities in India, and only Taiwanese support staff remain in the country, the report said. The motivation behind the order was not immediately clear, Bloomberg reported, though the outlet noted that Chinese officials have been asking regulators to curb knowledge and tech resources from being exported to India in a bid to preserve the country's manufacturing heft. The move comes as Foxconn and other Apple suppliers have been ramping up manufacturing in India as the iPhone maker seeks to reduce its reliance on Chinese manufacturing for its hardware. Foxconn in May received Indian government approval to build a $435 million semiconductor plant in the country. Apple's CEO Tim Cook has said the company is importing more iPhones from India as one way to handle the uncertainties around U.S. tariffs and trade risks.

US Private Payrolls Unexpectedly Declined in June, ADP Data Show
US Private Payrolls Unexpectedly Declined in June, ADP Data Show

Bloomberg

time26 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

US Private Payrolls Unexpectedly Declined in June, ADP Data Show

Employment at US companies fell in June for the first time in more than two years, reflecting a drop in services payrolls that may raise concerns about a more pronounced labor market slowdown. Private-sector payrolls decreased 33,000 last month after a downwardly revised 29,000 gain in May, according to ADP Research data released Wednesday. None of the economists in a Bloomberg survey of economists expected a decline.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store