Chinese factory activities record biggest rise in a decade in August
China's factory activity recorded its
highest level of expansion in nearly a decade in August, a private survey
showed on Tuesday, pointing to a solid recovery of the economy that's now
largely insulated from the global COVID-19 pandemic and the US's technology war
with China.
The Caixin/Markit manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI), weighted
toward smaller private businesses, came in at 53.1 in August, its strongest
reading since early 2011. A reading above 50 indicates expansion, while one
below 50 signals contraction.
Both production and new orders expanded at a brisker pace than in July, and
companies reported the first rise in new export sales since last December,
according to the private survey.
Also encouragingly, the fall in manufacturing staffing levels in August was the
slowest this year, an indication that employment was nearing stabilization as
surveyed firms reported a continued increase in order backlogs.
Tuesday's results showed that the private factory sector fared even better than
its official counterpart.
The official PMI reading was announced on Monday, edging down to 51 in August
from the previous month's 51.1. August was the sixth month in a row that the
official reading stayed above the demarcation line.
The August official non-manufacturing PMI rose to 55.2 from 54.2 in July,
however, beating analysts' expectations.
In a note sent to the Global Times on Tuesday, Goldman Sachs economists said
that the outperformance of the Caixin PMI, more closely linked to export growth
than the official reading, "hints at continued strength in export growth
in August."
The nation surprised the markets with a 10.4 percent jump in yuan-denominated
exports in July, according to customs statistics, despite the fallout of the
pandemic on global demand.
An economic recovery well on track, as shown by the readings, also contrasts
with the US' escalated clampdown on Chinese businesses.
The Trump administration has not only issued executive orders targeting TikTok
and WeChat, but added more Chinese firms to its Entity List in an attempt to
wall off China.
Lingering uncertainties associated with the US hostility also have market
watchers calling for continued policy support to ensure an intact economic
rebound.
"Macroeconomic policy support is essential, especially when there are
still many uncertainties in the domestic and overseas economies. Relevant
policies should not be significantly tightened," Wang Zhe, senior
economist at Caixin Insight Group, said in a statement sent to the Global
Times.