Sunday, April 20, 2025

AMID VIRUS OUTBREAKS: China’s factory activity likely shrank

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BEIJING- China’s factory activity likely shrank in March, a Reuters poll showed, as the country imposed more mass testing and activity controls amid its worst resurgence of COVID-19 cases since early 2020.

The official manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) is expected to have eased to 49.9 in March, the lowest reading in five months, from 50.2 in February, according to the median forecast of 36 economists polled by Reuters on Wednesday.

A reading below 50 indicates contraction from the previous month; anything above 50 indicates expansion.

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“We lower our forecast for the official manufacturing PMI to 49.0 from 49.5 previously, in view of the worsening COVID-19 situation, especially in Shanghai. The contracting property sector and slowing export growth are also negative for the manufacturing PMIs in March,” Nomura analysts said in a note on Friday. There is one official and one unofficial manufacturing PMI.

Following unexpectedly upbeat economic activity data from the National Bureau of Statistics for January and February, analysts warned March data may broadly worsen.

“Almost all activity data point to a worsening slowdown in recent weeks, due mainly to the escalated anti-Omicron measures and the deteriorating property sector, and we believe the situation could worsen further in Q2,” Nomura analysts said.

The latest COVID-19 resurgence has brought about lockdowns in financial center Shanghai and shutdowns in the tech hub of Shenzhen in March. Changchun, capital of the virus-hit northeastern province Jilin, has completed more than 10 rounds of citywide testing of its residents so far.

The rapidly deteriorating pandemic and escalating control measures added downward pressure on the world’s second-largest economy. Premier Li Keqiang said on March the 2022 growth target for GDP was “around 5.5 percent”. – Reuters

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