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China’s official non-manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) – which measures morale in the services and construction sectors – bounced back to 53.2 in September

China power crisis weighs on manufacturing activity, drops to lowest level since coronavirus outbreak

  • The official manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) – a survey of sentiment among factory owners – fell to 49.6 in September, from 50.1 in August
  • China’s official non-manufacturing PMI – which measures morale in the services and construction sectors – rose to 53.2 in September

Activity in China’s manufacturing sector contracted in September due to “low sentiment of high energy-consuming industries”, data released on Thursday showed, but the services sector bounced back strongly from coronavirus outbreaks last month.

The official manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) – a survey of sentiment among factory owners – fell to 49.6 in September from 50.1 in August, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed.
The figure was below the median forecast of a Bloomberg survey of analysts, which had predicted a fall to 50, as the index dropped to its lowest level since the start of the coronavirus pandemic in February 2020.

A reading above 50 indicates growth in sector activity, while a reading below the mark represents contraction. The lower the reading is below 50, the faster the pace of contraction.

In September, due to the low sentiment of high energy-consuming industries, the manufacturing PMI fell to below the threshold
Zhao Qinghe

But the official non-manufacturing PMI – which measures morale in the services and construction sectors – rose to 53.2 in September, from 47.5 in August. The increase was driven by a rise in the services index from 45.2 to 52.4. The construction index, though, dropped to 57.5 in September from 60.5.

The figure was above expectations in the Bloomberg survey, which had predicted a rise to 49.8, as activity in the railway transport, air transport, accommodation, catering, ecological protection and environmental control sectors all recovered having been impacted coronavirus outbreaks in August.

“In September, due to the low sentiment of high energy-consuming industries, the manufacturing PMI fell to below the threshold. But looking from the sentiment perspective, among the 21 surveyed sectors, there were 12 above the threshold, two more than last month, and most manufacturing sectors expanded from last month,” said senior NBS statistician Zhao Qinghe.

“From the perspective of market expectations, enterprises are optimistic about the recent recovery of the service market.”

The composite PMI, which includes both manufacturing and services activity, rose to 51.7 in September from 48.9 in August.

“The manufacturing PMIs diverged this month. But the big picture is that industry was coming off the boil even prior to the latest power shortages. On a more upbeat note, the official surveys point to a sharp rebound in services activity, which is probably enough to ensure that overall economic output picked up this month, partially reversing a sharp decline in August,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics.

“The surveys took place prior to most of the hit to industrial activity from the latest power shortages. Since then, power shortages have intensified – anecdotal reports suggest that factories in more than 20 provinces have had to scale back production in response. We’ll have to wait for the hard data due in the coming weeks to see the full impact of these disruptions.”
On Tuesday, data confirmed that profits at China’s industrial firms grew at a weaker pace in August from a year earlier, slowing for a sixth consecutive month, as manufacturers struggled with high commodity prices, the coronavirus and shortages in some key components.

03:30

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Also on Thursday, the Caixin/Markit manufacturing PMI – which focuses on small, private firms unlike the official index whose respondents come mostly from larger, state-owned firms – rose to 50.0 in September, from 49.2 in August. The figure was above the exceptions in the Bloomberg survey which had predicted a rise to 49.5.

“Conditions in the manufacturing sector picked up in September from the previous month, though the improvement was limited. The Caixin China manufacturing PMI came in at 50, indicating the downward pressure on the economy was still high,” said. Wang Zhe, senior economist at Caixin Insight Group.

“On the one hand, the [coronavirus] continued to impact demand, supply, and circulation in the manufacturing sector. The state of the [coronavirus] overseas and the shortage of shipping capacity also dragged down total demand. [Coronavirus] control measures have clearly impacted the logistics industry.”

Momentum in the world’s second-biggest economy has weakened in recent months, with the latest power cuts adding further pressures to the manufacturing sector.
Retail sales growth in China also slumped further in August, with both industrial production and fixed-asset investments growth failing to meet consensus expectations last month.

This week, Goldman Sachs lowered their economic growth forecast for China this year to 7.8 per cent from 8.2 per cent, citing recent sharp cuts to production in a range of high-energy-intensive industries.

The World Bank, though, actually raised its China growth forecast to 8.5 per cent growth this year, compared with 8.1 per cent forecast in April.

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