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Stuttering China recovery weighs on Asian markets by AFP Staff Writers Hong Kong (AFP) Aug 15, 2022 Asian markets mostly rose Monday as investors cheered signs of cooling US inflation but optimism was dampened by data showing China's economic recovery stuttering under Covid-19 restrictions and a slumping property sector. China's central bank slashed key interest rates in a surprise move Monday as a raft of data showed weakness in the world's second-largest economy. The figures showed China's industrial production and retail sales growth for July came in lower than expected. Industrial production was up 3.8 percent year-on-year, but down from 3.9 percent in June and well below analysts' forecasts. "The risk of stagflation in the world economy is rising, and the foundation for domestic economic recovery is not yet solid," China's National Bureau of Statistics warned. Beijing's rigid adherence to a zero-Covid strategy has held back economic recovery as snap lockdowns and long quarantines batter business activity and a recovery in consumption. "July's economic data is very alarming," Raymond Yeung, Greater China economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group, told Bloomberg. "The Covid-zero policy continues to hit the service sector and dampen household consumption." July's retail figures confirmed how fragile consumer confidence still is, said CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson. "This weakness in the Chinese economy comes against the struggle to adapt to a zero-Covid policy, which the government shows little sign of relaxing, against a backdrop of rising cases," Hewson said. "Problems in the property sector also aren't helping, where many home buyers are halting mortgage payments in protest at delays to the completion of new homes." Hong Kong ended down 0.7 percent while Shanghai closed marginally lower to erase early gains after a mixed session. Tokyo was the standout in Asian trade, climbing 1.1 percent on easing concerns over US inflation and as GDP data showed the Japanese economy recovering after the government lifted Covid-19 curbs on businesses. Other Asian markets also got a lift from Wall Street, which ended Friday on a positive note after consumer and producer price data indicated a meaningful cooling in inflation. Sydney rose 0.5 percent and Taipei was up 0.8 percent, even as China said it had organised fresh military drills around Taiwan as a delegation of US lawmakers visited the island. Wellington, Manila and Bangkok also saw gains. Singapore and Jakarta were lower, while Seoul and Mumbai were closed for holidays. European markets climbed at the open, with London and Frankfurt up 0.4 percent, while Paris advanced 0.5 percent. The markets have been concerned that, after two consecutive Federal Reserve increases in borrowing costs of three-quarters of a percentage point, further hikes of a similar magnitude could choke off economic recovery. Signs of improving inflation data last week have prompted debate on whether the Fed may pivot more quickly from its recent posture of moving aggressively to hike interest rates. Investors will be watching the release on Wednesday of the minutes from the Fed's last policy meeting in July for clues to the US central bank's rate plans. "We're definitely heading in a better direction," Kristina Hooper, Invesco chief global market strategist, told Bloomberg Television. "It looks like we are passed peak for inflation. The problem is inflation is still very, very high." Oil prices slipped in Asian trade, with both main contracts down around two percent as the stuttering Chinese economic recovery added to concerns about demand.
China's factory output, retail sales up in July but weaker than expected The world's second-biggest economy saw a bounce in business activity as some coronavirus restrictions eased in June, but the boost is fading and Beijing remains welded to a zero-Covid policy of snap lockdowns and long quarantines, which has battered sentiment. But for July, China's industrial production rose 3.8 percent on-year, down from a 3.9 percent jump in June, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said Monday. Retail sales grew at a slower-than-expected 2.7 percent from a year ago, down from 3.1 percent in June, while the urban unemployment rate fell to 5.4 percent, the NBS said. "The risk of stagflation in the world economy is rising, and the foundation for domestic economic recovery is not yet solid," the NBS warned in a statement. Retail sales likely stalled "due to some renewed virus disruptions and the blow to consumer sentiment from the problems in the housing market," Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics said in a recent report. "July's economic data is very alarming," Raymond Yeung, Greater China economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd, told Bloomberg TV. "The Covid Zero policy continues to hit the service sector and dampen household consumption." China's property sector has been teetering, with frustrated homebuyers across dozens of cities taking part in mortgage boycotts as cash-strapped developers struggle to complete projects. China's economic growth was just 0.4 percent on-year in the second quarter -- its slowest rate since the initial Covid outbreak. Credit growth in the country edged down in July as well, with analysts at Nomura saying in a report that it did not bode well for the second half of the year. "The combination of zero-Covid strategy and the deteriorating property sector continues to drag down the economy, even as export growth remains elevated and the automobile sector gets a boost from the purchase tax cut," Nomura analysts said.
'Hopeless': Chinese homebuyers run out of patience with developers Beijing (AFP) Aug 12, 2022 Newly married and with his first child on the way, auto worker Wang wanted to move into the apartment he bought in Wuhan three years ago but those hopes were dashed by China's ballooning property crisis. Saddled with $300,000 in debt and with his unit nowhere near completion, the 34-year-old decided he had had enough and stopped making mortgage payments. He is among numerous homebuyers across dozens of cities in China who have boycotted payments over fears that their properties will not be compl ... read more
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