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China manufacturing indices at highest in 2 years
by Staff Writers
Beijing Nov 1, 2016


China aircraft market to hit nearly $1 tn in 20 years: Airbus
Zhuhai, China (AFP) Nov 1, 2016 - China will need nearly 6,000 aircraft worth $945 billion over the next two decades, aerospace giant Airbus said Tuesday at the Zhuhai air show.

At that point China will be the world's number one source of air traffic and its top aircraft market, it said in its 2016-2035 Global Market Forecast.

"Domestic passenger traffic in mainland China has quadrupled over the last 10 years, and is set to become the world's number one aviation market," said John Leahy, Airbus Chief Operating Officer Customers.

"In the next 20 years, the greatest demand for passenger aircraft will come from China."

China accounts for nearly a quarter of the European aircraft maker's deliveries, with 158 delivered to China last year.

It is currently the second-largest aviation market after the US.

Air travel is booming in the world's second-largest economy, as its burgeoning middle class spends more on travel, with overall air traffic growth of over 500 percent from 2000 to 2014, Airbus said.

Despite slowing economic expansion and a challenging transition to a consumer economy, China's market for international air travel is predicted to average 6.7 percent annual growth for the next 20 years, it added.

Airbus is locked in close competition with Boeing for China market share, with Airbus planes accounting for slightly less than half of the country's fleets.

Meanwhile, homegrown Chinese competitors COMAC and AVIC seek to strip the foreign giants of their duopoly, and are developing single-aisle and wide-body planes with the explicit support of Beijing.

Factory activity in China expanded last month at its fastest pace in more than two years, official and private figures showed Tuesday, boding well for the world's second-largest economy.

Investors closely watch the purchasing managers' index (PMI) numbers, which gauge conditions at factories and mines, as the first indicators of the health of the economy each month.

The official PMI came in at 51.2 for October, its highest since July 2014, figures from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed.

That was up from September's 50.4 and was well ahead of the median forecast of 50.3 in a Bloomberg News survey of economists.

A figure above 50 signals expanding activity while anything below demonstrates shrinkage.

"Production and market demand is picking up again, accelerating expansion," NBS analyst Zhao Qinghe said in a statement.

But Zhao added that downward pressures remain on imports and exports owing to the sluggish recovery in global growth.

The private Caixin Purchasing Managers' Index, which focuses on small companies, pointed to a similar trend.

Its October reading climbed to 51.2, up from 50.1 the previous month and also the highest since July 2014, the Chinese financial magazine said in a joint statement with data compiler IHS Markit.

"The economy seems to be stabilising for the moment, owing primarily to policies implemented to sustain growth," Caixin analyst Zhong Zhengsheng said in the statement.

But Zhong warned: "Supportive policies must be continued, or industrial output may be dragged down by a slowdown in investment."

The key manufacturing sector has been struggling for months in the face of sagging world demand for Chinese products and excess industrial capacity left over from the country's infrastructure boom.

"This might be as good as it gets," HSBC Holdings economic researcher Frederic Neumann told Bloomberg.

"A generous stimulus injected earlier this year is still winding itself through the economy," he added, and with the government now "tapping the brakes" in the property sector "growth will likely cool again in the coming months".

However, analysts at ANZ Research said: "We believe that today's data signals the end of persistent sluggishness in the industrial sector."

Investors welcomed the figures, with China's benchmark Shanghai Composite Index rising 0.71 percent and the Shenzhen Composite Index, which tracks stocks on the country's second exchange, gaining 1.11 percent.

But others were more cautious.

Analysts at Nomura attributed the PMI rises to a strong performance in the high-tech and high-end equipment manufacturing industries, but expressed scepticism that such growth could be sustained.

"We believe that a cooling property market should weigh on property investment and in turn, on the real economy, in the coming months," the firm said in a statement.

China is a vital driver of global growth, but its economy expanded only 6.9 percent in 2015 -- its weakest rate in a quarter of a century -- and has slowed further this year.

Beijing has said it wants to reorient the economy away from relying on debt-fuelled investment to boost growth and towards a consumer-driven model, but the transition has proven challenging.


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