
China factory activity cools as demand abroad, at home weakens
The purchasing managers' index (PMI) fell to 49.3 in July versus 49.7 in June, National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data showed, below the 50-mark separating growth from contraction and missing a median forecast of 49.7 in a Reuters poll. The reading was the lowest since April.
While US and Chinese officials agreed to seek an extension of their 90-day tariff truce on Tuesday, policymakers in the world's second-biggest economy still need to deal with overcapacity in key industries, protracted property market weakness and tepid household demand.
"Export momentum is likely to slow following the dramatic front-loading in the first half," said Xu Tianchen, senior economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit.
"One silver lining for China, however, is that it won't struggle with a significant cost advantage after Trump is going to charge 15–20 per cent tariffs to its other major trade partners."
According to the NBS survey, the new export orders sub-index remained in contraction for a 15th straight month, nudging down to 47.1 from 47.7 in June.
Overall new orders fell into contraction from June's expansion, indicating demand at home is also weak.
Hong Kong and China equities slipped in response to the data.
NBS statistician Zhao Qinghe said the traditional off-season for manufacturing, high temperatures, heavy rains and flooding in some regions in July combined to push the PMI lower.
Production growth slowed in July and employment was still weak as producers tried to save costs, the NBS survey showed.
Raw material input prices also grew and output prices rose to 48.3 from 46.2 in June, echoing authorities' efforts to tackle price wars among producers.
China's economy grew 5.20 per cent in the second quarter, ahead of expectations, helped by the government's policy support and US President Donald Trump's decision to pause a massive hike in tariffs to allow further negotiations. That prompted the IMF to lift its forecast on the country's annual growth to 4.80 per cent this year compared with a previous forecast for 4.0 per cent.
Top leaders at a Wednesday meeting pledged to "manage disorderly competition" among enterprises for the remainder of the year, as steep price cuts among manufacturers fuelled industrial deflation.
"(We) must help foreign trade companies that have been greatly affected and strengthen financing support," state media Xinhua reported, citing a summary of the meeting.
Analysts have emphasised the need for China to shift away from a state-led, export-driven manufacturing economy to one powered by increased domestic consumer demand.
They said this week's announcement of childcare subsidies is a small but encouraging step toward economic rebalancing. With authorities striving to spur a flagging birth rate, China will hand out an annual childcare subsidy of 3,600 yuan (US$501) until age three.
Still, the non-manufacturing PMI, which includes services and construction, dropped to 50.1 in July from 50.5 in June, the lowest reading since November, according to NBS.
Despite the summer vacation travel season, the services PMI also declined to 50.0 from June's 50.1.

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