China’s Growth Recovery Still Patchy Despite Better Outlook

A surge in Chinese spending last month has spurred more optimism about the country’s economic rebound, though weakness among manufacturers and sales of cars and homes still suggest the recovery isn’t yet on sure footing.

(Bloomberg) — A surge in Chinese spending last month has spurred more optimism about the country’s economic rebound, though weakness among manufacturers and sales of cars and homes still suggest the recovery isn’t yet on sure footing.

Catering, tourism and other in-person businesses recorded big jumps in revenue over last week’s Lunar New Year holiday, recent data has shown. That added to strong figures from an official survey released this week on services activity, which rebounded as people in China became more willing to travel and spend money following the end of strict Covid Zero curbs.

The faster-than-expected reopening comes alongside economic growth forecast upgrades from the International Monetary Fund, as well as slew of investment banks, including Citigroup Inc., Nomura Holdings Inc., Guotai Junan International Holdings and Huatai Securities. 

Citi economists, who raised their 2023 growth projection to 5.7% on Wednesday, said the revision “comes almost fully from consumption, especially consumer services.” 

The focus on boosting consumption has been touted by top leaders — including most recently by President Xi Jinping, who this week called for greater efforts that would ensure income stability among residents and create conditions that will make them more willing to spend, according to a readout of a meeting Tuesday that he chaired.

Not all the data so far is positive, though. Sales of durable goods such as cars remain tepid, with major carmakers monitored by the Ministry of Commerce reporting just a 3.6% uptick during the holiday period compared to a year prior, an official said earlier this week. That trailed a nearly 7% increase in revenue among major retail and catering firms.

Home sales, meanwhile, continue to be a drag, with the 100 biggest real estate developers reporting a 32.5% plunge in sales in January from a year earlier, steeper than December’s decline. Sliding housing prices have kept buyers away, even though policymakers have expanded stimulus for the industry.

The outlook for property remains precarious. Caterpillar Inc., one of the world’s largest makers of heavy machinery, expects demand from China to continue to be sluggish this year. Chief Executive Officer Jim Umpleby said Tuesday the firm does not “see signs of improvement at this point.”

Domestic sales of excavators in China — a leading indicator for construction demand — plunged 45% in 2022 from a year prior, with an even sharper decline in December. 

“Pent-up demand might be limited to in-person services,” Lu Ting, Nomura’s chief China economist, wrote in a report on Tuesday. The firm raised its 2023 gross domestic product growth forecast to 5.3% From 4.8% on a “faster than expected” transition to herd immunity, though Lu noted that some weakness remains. 

“Durable goods consumption may not benefit much,” he wrote, adding that car sales could become a “significant drag” as a tax cut encouraging purchases expires. 

The industrial sector will also likely take more time to recover from the impact of Covid disruptions. The holiday period is traditionally a slower time for manufacturers, given that workers largely go home to celebrate with their families. The wave of Covid that hit the country as restrictions were dropped also likely contributed to worker illnesses. 

An official gauge of manufacturing activity signaled expansion in January, albeit only slightly. On Wednesday, a private survey showed smaller firms are still struggling, with that index remaining in contraction for a sixth consecutive month. 

What Bloomberg Economics Says …

“If the message from Tuesday’s strong official PMIs was that China has started a brisk recovery, the message from Wednesday’s Caixin report is that a significant swath of the economy continues to struggle. To be sure, the rise in the Caixin manufacturing gauge in January reinforces our view that conditions are on the mend. But a reading still below 50 in contractionary territory suggests exporters and small companies are lagging in the recovery.”

— Chang Shu, economist

Read the full report here.

“The pandemic continued to take a toll on the economy in January,” Wang Zhe, senior economist at Caixin Insight Group, said in a statement accompanying that release. “But optimism in the sector continued to improve as businesses expected a post-Covid economic recovery.”

(Updates with details on Citi upgrade, Xi remarks in third and fourth paragraphs.)

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.