China manufacturing grows for second month
China’s manufacturing activity grew in November for the second month in a row, official data showed Saturday, in a further sign of strength in the world’s second-biggest economy after a marked slowdown
China’s manufacturing activity grew in November for the second month in a row, official data showed on Saturday, in a further sign of strength in the world’s second-biggest economy after a marked slowdown.
The indications of upward momentum were reinforced by a separate survey by British banking giant HSBC that showed growth for the first time in 13 months.
China’s purchasing managers’ index (PMI) reached 50.6 last month, up from 50.2 in October and 49.8 in September and the highest since hitting 53.3 in April, figures from the National Bureau of Statistics showed.
The PMI is a widely watched barometer of the health of China’s economy, and a reading above 50 indicates expansion while anything below points to contraction. The improved data eased recent months’ worries of a “hard landing”, said IHS senior China economist Alistair Thornton, though he cautioned that risks remained and reforms were needed for long-term growth.
“The fears surrounding that sharp hard landing have been largely averted,” he said, while also singling out as dangers an unstable property market and the debt crisis in Europe, a key trade partner for China.
The November figure came in below the 50.8 median forecast of 10 economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires.