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China Factory Gauge Rebounds as Business Confidence Improves

The manufacturing purchasing managers index rose to 50.5 from 49.2 last month, the biggest jump on month since 2012.

China Factory Gauge Rebounds as Business Confidence Improves
A worker assembles an end frame for a shipping container at a factory in China. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)

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The first official gauge of China’s manufacturing sector rebounded in March, signaling a stabilization in the economy as policy stimulus takes hold.

  • The manufacturing purchasing managers index rose to 50.5 from 49.2 last month, the biggest jump on month since 2012. The non-manufacturing PMI -- a gauge of services and construction -- stood at 54.8 versus 54.3 in February. Readings above 50 signal expansion.
China Factory Gauge Rebounds as Business Confidence Improves

Key Insights

  • Leading sub-gauges improved, with new orders and new export orders both jumping to the highest levels in six months.
  • “Monetary policy measures have been effective, and the proactive fiscal policies have stabilized investment,” said Zhou Hao, an economist with Commerzbank AG in Singapore. “In the short term, the expectation for a RRR cut will likely be reduced,” he said, referring to a reduction in the amount of money banks must keep in reserve.
  • Zhou cautioned that the rise in the March data may overstate the actual increase in activity, as the Lunar New Year holiday in February weighed down the February data.

Recovery Signs

  • The release backs up the signs of recovery seen in the earliest data on the economy, which showed business confidence and stock markets improving amid policy support and progress in the China-U.S. trade talks.
  • Premier Li Keqiang told business people last week that March economic indicators would show “signs of visible improvement,” with the economy doing better in the first quarter than the government expected.

--With assistance from Ailing Tan and Dandan Li.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Xiaoqing Pi in Beijing at xpi1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jeffrey Black at jblack25@bloomberg.net, James Mayger, Stanley James

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With assistance from Bloomberg