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    China Manufacturing "Expands" at Faster Pace; China Manufacturing "Contracts" 6th Consecutive Month; Confused by Conflicting Headlines?

    Wed, 05/02/2012 - 02:45 EDT - Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis
    • RDF10

    China manufacturing is reported to be in contraction and expansion simultaneously. The Chinese government reports expansion. The HBSC PMI says China is in contraction for the 6th consecutive month.

    Obviously this is impossible, so the question is "who to believe?"

    China Manufacturing Expands at Faster Pace

    Bloomberg reports China’s Stocks Rise Most in Two Weeks on Manufacturing, Fee Cut

    China’s stocks rose the most in two weeks after manufacturing expanded at a faster pace and the nation’s two stock exchanges said they will cut trading fees by 25 percent to attract investors.

    Citic Securities Co. and Haitong Securities Co. led brokerages higher on speculation the regulators’ move may boost stock trading. Jiangxi Copper Co. and Yunnan Copper Industry Co. (000878) gained more than 9 percent after the Purchasing Managers’ Index rose to 53.3 in April, the fastest pace in a year.

    “We’re definitely going to have a major bull market ahead,” Jerry Lou, the chief strategy officer at Morgan Stanley
    Huaxin in Shanghai, said in an April 24 phone interview.
    China Manufacturing Contracts 6th Consecutive Month

    Markit reports China Manufacturing Sector Operating Conditions Deteriorate at Marginal Rate

    April data pointed to further reductions in manufacturing output and new business, although rates of decline were marginal in both cases. Consequently, companies remained cautious with regards to hiring, highlighted by the index measuring trends in manufacturing employment reaching its lowest level in 37 months.

    After adjusting for seasonal factors, the HSBC Purchasing Managers’ Index™ (PMI™) – a composite indicator designed to give a single-figure snapshot of operating conditions in the manufacturing economy – posted 49.3 in April, up from 48.3 in March. That indicated a sixth successive month-on-month worsening of manufacturing sector operating conditions in China.

    Key points

    • Manufacturing output and new orders both fall at marginal rates
    • Employment down at fastest rate in over three years
    • Input cost inflation remains subdued

    Comment

    Commenting on the China Manufacturing PMI™ survey, Hongbin Qu, Chief Economist, China & Co-Head of Asian Economic Research at HSBC said:

    “The upward revision to April’s final PMI reading, compared to the flash estimate, confirms that the pace of China's slowdown is stabilized. The 8.1% y-o-y GDP growth is likely to be the cyclical trough. As easing measures are starting to work and additional easing measures are on the way in the light of accommodative inflation outlook in the coming months, we expect Chinese GDP growth to bottom out in 2Q and recover modestly to over 8.5% in 2H.”
    Cyclical Trough Coming Up?

    What is with these perpetually bullish comments on Markit? I am seriously at a loss here.

    For months on end we heard nonsense about no recession in Europe, followed by no recession in Germany, followed by calls for a short recession.

    Then the bottom fell out days ago as noted in Eurozone Manufacturing PMI Hits 34 Month Low; German Manufacturing Hits 33 Month Low; Orders Drop Steeply Across the Board.

    Absurd Predictions

    Here we are again with preposterous predictions of a cyclical bottom in China.

    I do not know what the next quarter will bring, or even the next several quarters,  but these guys are not on the ball nor are they in left field. Frankly, they are not even in the ballpark.

    If China GDP posts a cyclical bottom at 8.1% I will eat my hat. I believe, along with Michael Pettis at China Financial Markets that China will "average" 3.5% GDP or less for the rest of the decade.

    For details, including two bets Pettis made with The Economist please see 12 Predictions by Michael Pettis on China; Non-Food Commodity Prices Will Collapse Over Next Three to Four Years; Nails in the Hard Landing Coffin?

    If China growth slows to 3.5% or lower on average, the bottom will be far less, perhaps even negative. Regardless, the idea that China's GDP will bottom at 8.1% is absurd.

    Mike "Mish" Shedlock
    http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
    Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post ListMike "Mish" Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction.
    Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.

    • Original article
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    Related

    • China Manufacturing Weakens 8th Month; Will the US Economy Continue to Decouple From the Rest of the World?

      The global economy led by Europe and China continues its downward path. Will the US follow? First let's take a look at China. Markit reports China Manufacturing PMI Declines 8th Consecutive Month. Key points

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      The HSBC China Manufacturing PMI™ shows modest growth this month. The index is at 51.5 with growth above 50.

    • China Manufacturing PMI Plunges to 32-Month Low of 47.7; Reflections on Stocks Rallying on "Bad News"

      Equity markets soared on central bank manipulations and various rumors the past few days. However, neither rumors nor trivial actions (which is all that happened) can save the global economy. Yesterday stocks rallied on news China Cuts Bank Reserve Ratios by .5 Percentage Points and Central Banks Cut Rates on Dollar Swap Lines.

    • China New Export New Orders Decline At Fastest Pace in 42 Months; China's Precarious Rebalancing Act

      HSBC China Manufacturing PMI™ shows Output falls at fastest pace since March. Key points New export orders fall at fastest rate in 42 months Output and input prices continue to fall Purchasing activity declines amid weak demand and lower production requirements

    • China PMI Shows Modest Improvement

      The HSBC China Manufacturing PMI shows Modest improvement in operating conditions.

    • Will China Save The World... Again?

      Chinese economic growth was a primary driver of the world-wide economic recovery from the great depression.  Thanks to a massive stimulus program initiated and implemented by the Chinese (a purely Keynes based program), China went on a massive infrastructure build.  This in turn increased the country's demand for raw materials which drove the economic growth of raw materials exporters like Australia, Brazil and Russia.  In essence, the BRIC countries -- thanks to China's spending -- prevented the world from collapsing into a world wide depression.

    • Germany Trifecta: Steep Drop in Construction New Business, Services New Business, Manufacturing New Business

      Eurozone activity is crumbling at a steep pace. A close look at Germany provides all the information you need to see that it's not just the club-med states are in deep trouble. Steep Drop in Services New Business The Markit Germany Services PMI® shows Sharpest drop in German services activity since July 2009. Key points:

    • German Manufacturing PMI Back in Contraction, New Orders Plunge, Price Inflation Up

      As expected (by me anyway), the Markit/BME Germany Manufacturing PMI® shows Germany is back in contraction. Weaker new order intakes lead to deteriorating manufacturing business conditions in March. Key Points: Output growth slows to only marginal pace Sharpest fall in new work for three months Cost inflation highest since July 2011 Historical Overview:

    • "Eurozone Slides Back Into Recession" Says Markit PMI News Release; Sharp Decline in German Export Business; Misguided Decoupling Theories

      Inquiring minds are digging into details of the latest Eurozone releases. The Markit Flash Eurozone PMI® says Eurozone slides back into recession as output falls at stronger rate in March Both manufacturing output and service sector activity contracted in March, showing the worst performances for three and four months respectively. However, in both cases, the rates of decline were only very modest.

    • Japan Services PMI Shows Sharp Decline in New Orders; Global New Export Orders Have Steepest Drop Since April 2009.

      The global economy continues to weaken, but not in a straight line as China rebounded somewhat, with Japan deteriorating further.

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