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Friday, 28 February 2014
by Federation of Chamber of Commerce on 22:12
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A Chinese manufacturing gauge fell to an eight-month low in February, adding to headwinds forgrowth as Premier Li Keqiang prepares to map out the government’s economic strategy to the nation’s legislature.
The Purchasing Managers’ Index (CPMINDX) was at 50.2, the National Bureau of Statistics and China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said today in Beijing. That compared with January’s 50.5 reading and the 50.1 median analyst estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. A number above 50 signals expansion.
Today’s data underscore the challenges facing the government as it tries to sustain expansion above Li’s 7 percent bottom line while implementing policies to rein in credit and overcapacity. The yuan’s biggest decline on record against the dollar in February may add to investor concerns that the economy is vulnerable to financial risks even as Communist Party leaders this week pledged to keep growth within a “reasonable range.”
“The slowdown in manufacturing growth is due to a deceleration in investment, especially of credit-sensitive infrastructure and real-estate investment,” said Louis Kuijs, chief China economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Plc in Hong Kong. “But there’s no need to become overly concerned -- the government has the policy space it needs to ensure its bottom line on growth this year while retaining financial stability.”
China’s benchmark stock index slumped 2.7 percent this week, the biggest drop in seven weeks, amid concerns economic expansion will ease as banks curb lending and a weaker yuan spurs capital outflows.
Federation of Chamber of Commerce
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