China Recovery Wobbles as Drought, Global Slowdown Add to Risks

China’s economy continued to recover in August but warning signs are flashing across a number of fronts as drought and weaker global demand add new risks to growth prospects.

That’s the outlook based on Bloomberg’s aggregate index of eight early indicators for this month. The overall gauge was at 5, unchanged from July, signaling momentum has steadied.

Recovery Underway

But the economy is facing multiple challenges

Strong overseas demand for Chinese goods, which has helped to offset some of the damage from Covid lockdowns on domestic spending, weakened sharply in August. South Korean exports, a leading indicator for global trade, barely grew in the first 20 days of this month from a year earlier.

The 0.5% increase in South Korea’s average daily shipments was the weakest since late 2020 and was a marked slowdown from the 14.5% rise in the same period last month. A slump in Hong Kong’s July exports also showed how a cooling global economy, worldwide interest-rate hikes and Covid disruptions are affecting demand.

For China’s domestic economy, the picture isn’t rosy either. The property market slump extended into August, with sales continuing to plunge in China’s four top cities. That’s despite months of efforts by the government to boost lending to home buyers, lower mortgages rates and allow more flexibility for down payments.

The latest official data showed property loans in July grew at the weakest rate since comparable data began in 2012. Mortgage rates will likely continue to be cut to a record low of 4.1% after banks reduced their five-year loan prime rate by 15 basis points earlier this week to boost housing demand.

Growth in car sales was also much slower than in July, another indication of weak domestic demand. Premier Li Keqiang promised last week to maintain preferential policies that are designed to boost sales and stimulate demand for cleaner cars as part of efforts to support the development of the electric vehicle industry.

Slowing Global Demand

Home and car sales both weakened

New economic headwinds this month, including a power crunch and Covid flareups, have hurt business confidence, especially among smaller firms. Standard Chartered Plc’s survey of more than 500 smaller companies showed confidence slipped in August as production activity “slowed significantly,” new orders weakened, and bank financing costs picked up.

“Ongoing Covid-led disruption and power-rationing measures imposed in some key production areas, including Sichuan, resulted in temporary factory shutdowns,” the firm’s economists Hunter Chan and Ding Shuang wrote in a report. “The disruption in production and sales resulted in a faster increase in raw material inventories and finished goods prices.”

Losing Confidence

Onshore stocks also trended lower

Covid outbreaks continued to derail what is usually the peak season at some of China’s top summer hot spots. The seaside city of Beihai only recently emerged from a monthlong lockdown, more than 100,000 tourists were trapped on the tropical island of Hainan because of outbreaks there, while Tibet had tens of thousands of tourists stranded in the region due to canceled flights and road blocks to contain infections.

A drought-induced power shortage has forced factories to shut down and shopping malls to turn off lights, especially in cities in western China. Although the economic damage is expected to be smaller than from power shortages last year, economists still expect industrial output to be hit in August.

Policy makers on Wednesday stepped up their economic stimulus with a further 1 trillion yuan ($146 billion) of funding largely focused on infrastructure spending. However, economists were relatively downbeat on the measures, saying they likely won’t go far enough to counter the damage from repeated Covid lockdowns and the property market slump.

Early Indicators

  • Bloomberg Economics generates the overall activity reading by aggregating a three-month weighted average of the monthly changes of eight indicators, which are based on business surveys or market prices.
  • Major onshore stocks – CSI 300 index of A-share stocks listed in Shanghai or Shenzhen (through market close on 25th of the month).
  • Total floor area of home sales in China’s four Tier-1 cities (Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen).
  • Inventory of steel rebar, used for reinforcing in construction (in 10,000 metric tons). Falling inventory is a sign of rising demand.
  • Copper prices – Spot price for refined copper in Shanghai market (yuan/metric ton).
  • South Korean exports – South Korean exports in the first 20 days of each month (year-on-year change).
  • Factory inflation tracker – Bloomberg Economics-created tracker for Chinese producer prices (year-on-year change).
  • Small and medium-sized business confidence – Survey of companies conducted by Standard Chartered.
  • Passenger car sales – Monthly result calculated from the weekly average sales data released by the China Passenger Car Association.

Source: Bloomberg

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