Sunday, June 7, 2009

China Economic Scan Weekly Economic Review - 7 June 2009

China Economic Scan Weekly Economic Review - 7 June 2009

7/06/2009. Source: China Economic Scan. Callum Thomas, Managing Director, China Economic Scan

Last week in the Chinese economy, aside from the visit by US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, there were a few interesting economic developments. Among data releases were the official PMI, and industrial profits, there were also inflation forecasts and statements from government bodies.

The official Purchasing Manager’s Index (PMI) was at a seasonally adjusted 53.1 in May after registering 53.5 in April, the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said. A reading of the PMI above 50 indicates an expansion.

Chinese industrial profits in the first 4 months in 22 provinces fell 27.9% from a year earlier, narrowing a drop seen in Q1, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said. In April, 23 out of 39 sectors saw their profit growth rebound or their losses narrow, the NBS said in a statement on its website (www.stats.gov.cn).

China's banking regulator and the Finance Ministry warned banks against issuing risky loans, saying they must step up their risk management. Banks extended 5.17 trillion yuan ($757.2 billion) in loans in the first 4 months of 2008, exceeding the government's minimum target of 5 trillion yuan for all of 2009 and fanning fears that banks are taking undue credit risks.

A Bank of Communications report said China’s CPI is likely to set a fourth consecutive drop in May and to remain negative in the first half of 2009. BoCom expects food prices to drop slightly in May. The report indicated a range of –1.8% to –1.2%, based on data from the Ministry of Agriculture and Ministry of Commerce.

The Chinese Ministry of Commerce said it would seek to actively encourage foreign investment in China, China's actual foreign direct investment fell 22.5% on year in April to $5.89 billion, bringing actual FDI in the first 4 months of this year to $27.67 billion, down 21% from a year earlier.

There were roughly 666,000 foreign-invested companies in China as of end April. These foreign-invested firms contributed to 29.7% of China's overall industrial output in 2008.

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