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China's manufacturing moderated, but still points to expansion

China's manufacturing PMI for April came in broadly in line with expectations, and new orders remaining in expansion is a positive sign for further industrial activity recovery.

Manufacturing PMI continues to signal that the recovery in industrial activity will continue into the second quarter. As expected, the April manufacturing PMI of 50.4 showed a slight moderation from March's strong 50.8 read, but remained in expansion territory, indicating that the recovery of industrial activity will continue into the second quarter. Year-to-date, manufacturing strength has been concentrated in the tech and auto sectors, with semiconductor manufacturing up 40% YoY in 1Q24.

Photo: Dreamstime.com

In this month's PMI release, most subcategories pulled back slightly. But last month's trends continued. Most importantly, new orders (51.1) and new export orders (50.6) remained in expansion, indicating that the demand recovery seen in March's release was not just a blip. Employment (48.0) was little changed but remained in contraction for the 14th consecutive month, as there continues to be a mismatch between hiring demand and the labour supply.

The exceptions to this include the production sub-index, which rose to 52.9 from 52.2, hitting a 13-month-high, and sending a positive signal for April's industrial production data, as well as the purchasing price index, which surged to 54.0 from 50.5, which marked a 7-month high as well.

By firm size, experts saw the PMI above 50 for all firm sizes. The PMI for medium-sized enterprises hit a 14-month high of 50.7, while large-sized enterprises fell to a 5-month low of 50.3.

The decline in the non-manufacturing PMI was more pronounced, falling to 51.2 from 53.0, missing consensus forecasts and hitting a 3-month low. The non-manufacturing PMI paints a less rosy picture, with new business (46.3) remaining in contraction for the 12th consecutive month, and hitting a 16-month low. Employment (47.2) picked up, but also remained in contraction territory for the 14th consecutive month.

After being the primary driver for economic growth in 2023, consumption activity is moderating in 2024 amid weak consumer confidence and negative wealth effects, and this will likely have a larger impact on the services sector in China. Including policy support for the services sector in conjunction with existing plans for boosting consumption via the 'trade-in' programmes would not only offer a boost to near-term growth but would also be of benefit to China's long-term transition goals.

More information:
ING
www.think.ing.com

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