BEIJING: Chinese factory activity continued to expand in April, data showed Thursday, but analysts warned that the outlook remained clouded by battered overseas demand as the rest of the world struggles to overcome the coronavirus pandemic.
While the country ramps up economic production as daily life slowly gets back to normal following weeks of strict lockdown measures, its crucial markets in the United States and Europe remain virtually shut down.
The closely watched manufacturing Purchasing Managersā Index (PMI) came in at 50.8, just above the 50 mark that separates expansion and contraction, but down from the previous month and slightly short of expectations.
Still it is a significant improvement on the record low 35.7 posted in February, when major cities were forced to shut down to prevent the diseaseās spread.
Zhao Qinghe, senior statistician at the National Bureau of Statistics which released the data, said demand was recovering at a slower pace than production, in industries including textiles and chemical raw materials.
āThe spread of the pandemic is accelerating overseas, and global economic activity has contracted sharply,ā he said.
The NBS data also found that nearly 60 percent of companies surveyed reported āinsufficient ordersā and Zhao said some manufacturing companies reported a sharp decrease in newly signed export orders, while some orders that had already started production had been canceled.
āChinaās foreign trade faces greater challenges,ā he said.
Non-manufacturing PMI came in at 53.2 ā up on last month and above analyst predictions.
Zhao said there had been a āsignificant reboundā in the catering industry but added that āthe resumption of work and production in some industries is still lagging behind.ā
āIndustries such as accommodation, culture, sports, entertainment and resident services have had a larger impact from the epidemic,ā he said.
Many gyms, cultural centers and cinemas have remained closed throughout April.
ING chief economist for Greater China Iris Pang said that the latest PMI figures indicate Chinaās trend toward recovery still faced uncertainty.
āThis weakness may last a long time as the unemployment rate in the western side of the world has been high,ā she said. āThis will in turn hurt Chinaās domestic demand, and therefore foreign companiesā profits.ā
Analysts at Nomura said growing domestic demand in China could be offset by declining exports, which will keep the PMI figure hovering near the 50 mark.
The expectation of āa quick recovery in China is fading,ā they warned.
Chinaās economy shrunk 6.8 percent in the first quarter ā the first contraction in decades.
And UBS Securities said this week that 80 million jobs could have already been lost, with more than 10 million more to evaporate in export sectors.
Martin Rasmussen of Capital Economics said that Aprilās figures were boosted by a pick-up in construction, but that the months ahead will be āunderwhelming.ā
āLabour market strains will hold back the recovery in services and weak foreign demand will continue to weigh on manufacturing activity for some time,ā he said.
Chinese factory activity slows in face of coronavirus pandemic
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Updated 30 April 2020
Chinese factory activity slows in face of coronavirus pandemic

- Demand recovering at a slower pace than production
- Chinaās economy shrunk 6.8 percent in the first quarter ā the first contraction in decades