
Photographer: Qilai Shen / Bloomberg
Photographer: Qilai Shen / Bloomberg
An official gauge of China’s manufacturing output fell for a second month in January, while service activity slowed to its lowest level since March.
- The official index of manufacturing purchasing managers fell to 51.3 from 51.9 in December, according to data released Sunday by the National Bureau of Statistics.
- The non-production meter fell from 55.7 to 52.4 in January. That was the biggest drop since February last year, when China locked itself in to contain Covid-19. Measurements above 50 indicate an increase in production from the previous month.
Delay in China
The growth rate slowed in January, with services falling the most
Source: National Bureau of Statistics
Important insights
- China’s recovery from the pandemic accelerated towards the end of 2020, fueled by an export boom for medical and electronic goods.
- Economists expected a weak PMI in the run-up to the Lunar New Year holiday in February. Aside from a seasonal drop in production, strict travel restrictions and virus control measures following recent Covid-19 outbreaks in China mean that many workers will not make the annual trip home, which will likely result in lower spending on gifts and dining out.
- “These measures will hamper the recovery in the services sector, especially the hospitality industry,” wrote economists from Nomura Holdings Inc. led by Lu Ting in a report before the data was released. However, they could “provide a small boost to industrial production and construction in southern China, as workers would remain at work.”
- Overall, the new management measures will slow down economic growth in the first quarter, they wrote.
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- One sub-index of new factory export orders fell to 50.2, while one for new orders was lower at 52.3
- A sub-index of industrial employment fell to 48.4, while non-industrial employment fell to 47.8
– With help from James Mayger and Lin Zhu
(Updates with graphics, commentary from economists and more details everywhere.)