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Business / World Business

China contracts, eurozone and US slow

Published: 02 Sep 2015 - 12:00 am | Last Updated: 02 Nov 2021 - 02:57 am
Peninsula

Employees work on an assembly line producing Mercedes-Benz cars at a factory of Beijing Benz Automotive Co in Beijing. Activity in China’s manufacturing sector contracted at its fastest pace in three years in August, an official survey showed yesterday, reinforcing fears of a sharper slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy.

 

LONDON: China’s giant manufacturing industry contracted and eurozone and US growth eased in August in data published yesterday, while the International Monetary Fund cut its forecast for world growth this year.
Stocks on major markets tumbled along with commodity prices following the data, with markets still trying to gauge the likelihood of a September interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve. “It’s all consistent with a global economy which clearly is struggling to make any significant headway,” said economist Peter Dixon at Commerzbank. “As a consequence central banks which are thinking about raising interest rates in the near future will be looking at these numbers and it will maybe give them a little pause for thought.”
Global economic growth is likely to be weaker than earlier expected, the head of the IMF said, due to a slower recovery in advanced economies and a further slowdown in emerging nations.
Activity in China’s manufacturing sector contracted at its fastest pace in three years in August, according to official data, reinforcing fears of a sharper slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy despite a flurry of government support measures.
The Chinese government’s Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 49.7 in August from the previous month’s reading of 50.0, in line with expectations of analysts. A reading below 50 suggests contraction in activity.
A private survey from Markit/Caixin showed China’s factory sector shrank at its fastest pace in almost 6-1/2 years last month, with the PMI dropping to 47.3, the lowest since March 2009, from July’s 47.8. Even China’s services sector, which has been one of the few bright spots in the sputtering economy, showed signs of cooling, expanding at its slowest rate in more than a year, Markit said.
“Today’s reading suggests that manufacturing activities in China remain weak. We now expect GDP to grow by an annual 6.4 percent in the third quarter,” ANZ bank economists said. 
Indian manufacturing growth slowed but remained positive with the Nikkei India manufacturing PMI compiled by Markit at 52.3 from July’s 52.7. Japanese data went against the trend, with its manufacturing growth the strongest in seven months, reinforcing expectations the economy will rebound from a second-quarter contraction. 
In a sign of slowing global demand, exports from South Korea dropped nearly 15 percent in August from a year earlier, with shipments to China, the United States and Europe all weaker, a trend HSBC’s Frederic Neumann called worrisome for the global trade cycle.
“The country, after all, has long been a reliable bellwether. Korea’s PMI is still negative, and new export orders again contracted, even if at a less rapid pace than before,” Neumann, co-head of Asian Economics research, said.
Eurozone manufacturing growth eased in August, adding to the ECB’s woes as it battles to spur expansion and inflation with an asset purchase program.
Markit’s final manufacturing PMI for the eurozone was 52.3 last month, down from 52.43 in July, though it has been above the 50 mark that separates growth from contraction for over two years. The disappointing readings come almost half a year after the ECB began pumping 60 billion euros a month of fresh cash into the economy and a day after official data showed inflation in the 19-country bloc at just 0.2 percent. In one bright spot, eurozone unemployment unexpectedly fell to its lowest level in more than three years in July, official data showed. However, a two-year spell of jobs growth across British factories came to an end last month as manufacturing activity expanded at a slower pace, suggesting the sector is unlikely to boost economic growth much there this quarter. 
“Sterling’s appreciation and the continued sluggishness of the eurozone economy’s recovery suggest that a sustained revival in the export-orientated manufacturing sector will remain a distant prospect,” said Samuel Tombs at Capital Economics.
Growth in the US manufacturing sector slowed to its weakest in almost two years in August, with the Markit PMI falling to 53.0 in August, down from 53.8 in July.
“August’s survey highlights that the US manufacturing sector continues to struggle under the weight of the strong dollar and heightened global economic uncertainty, but resilient domestic spending and subdued cost pressures are keeping the recovery on track,” said Tim Moore, senior economist at Markit.
“Reflecting this, new orders from abroad have now fallen in four of the past five months, which represents the weakest phase of manufacturing export performance since late 2012.”
A reading from the US Institute of Supply Management (ISM) also showed US factory activity growth slowing in August, with its PMI at 51.1 from 52.7.
Canada’s factory activity contracted in August, with the Markit/RBC PMI falling to a 49.4 from 50.8 in July. Brazil’s Markit/HSBC PMI fell further in August to 45.8 from 47.2 in July. Brazil’s economy shrank 1.9 percent in the second quarter from the previous three months, government data showed on Friday.

Reuters