Global Macro Research
China

China: Activity firms while policy eases

October data add to the stronger picture painted by the September and August activity releases. Policy appears to be increasingly gaining traction and property could get further support.

Authors
Robert Gilhooly
Senior Emerging Markets Economist
Emerging Markets Economist
China flag

Duration: 1 Min

Date: 17 Nov 2023

Key Takeaways

  • China’s latest hard data were a mixed bag, but they were more encouraging than the PMIs. Retail sales and services saw notable improvement, and, on balance, the three-month data flow has become more reassuring. 
  • The property sector remains a major vulnerability, but a range of key activity metrics have at least stabilised over the past four to five months. Similarly, funding for developers has stopped falling.
  • A rumoured RMB 1 trillion funding programme for urban redevelopment would help provide a firmer foundation, but it remains unclear as to what steady-state we should expect. Indeed, even a stabilisation of ‘pipeline’ indicators could still imply a sizeable drag via fixed investment on GDP.
  • Policy now appears to have gained more traction than we had previously estimated. Our China Financial Conditions Index (CFCI) has been revised up – partly reflecting an updated real equilibrium interest rate (r*) estimate – suggesting that easing to date should do more to support growth heading into 2024.
  • Confirmed further stimulus – via an RMB 1 trillion issuance of special central government debt – and November’s injection of medium-term lending facility (MLF) liquidity – estimated to be roughly equivalent to a 25bps reserve requirement ratio (RRR) cut – will help ease financial conditions more. This could be amplified by urban redevelopment spending, if confirmed. 
  • As a result, while we remain somewhat cautious about the outlook for 2024 and beyond, our latest 2024 growth forecast has been revised up (4.4%, +0.2ppts). 

     

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