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China's Economic Woes Have Further to Spread Across Asia

From Hong Kong to Japan, exports data for December showed a marked downturn as supply-chain disruptions triggered trade war.

China's Economic Woes Have Further to Spread Across Asia
Pedestrians are reflected in the mirror of a store on Beijing Road in Guangzhou, China. (Photographer: Brent Lewin/Bloomberg)

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China’s weakening economy is roiling export markets in the rest of Asia -- and there’s more pain to come.

From Hong Kong to Japan, exports data for December showed a marked downturn as supply-chain disruptions triggered by U.S.-China tensions and a cyclical slowdown in the world economy, led by China, hit the trade-reliant region.

More bad news is in store for January: Bloomberg Economics’ early indicator shows China’s economy slowed further this month, while Thursday’s purchasing managers index is set to show another decline in factory output.

Nikkei PMIs for seven of the region’s economies are due Friday, with four of them already in contraction or less than half a point from contraction. A separate business survey on Wednesday showed South Korea manufacturers’ confidence for February at the most depressed level since the global financial crisis a decade ago.

China's Economic Woes Have Further to Spread Across Asia

Hong Kong’s worse-than-expected plunge in exports was telling for its broadly subdued demand from the rest of Asia, especially mainland China. Trade-dependent Singapore posted its biggest fall in exports in more than two years, while in Indonesia, the biggest economy in Southeast Asia, the drop in shipments was the worst since mid-2017.

South Korea and Taiwan had a pair of ugly exports reports last week, and Japan followed with the second decline in four months. January data for Vietnam, where trade accounts for twice the nation’s gross domestic product, showed a 1.3 percent contraction in exports from a year ago, the worst performance in five years.

Deeper Slowdown

Even in Malaysia, where export growth surprisingly picked up in December, shipments to China fell 0.5 percent from a year ago.

China’s growth has been steadily weakening over the years, reaching 6.6 percent last year, the slowest pace since 1990. As the world’s second-largest economy, it contributes about a third of global growth.

Beyond China, exports in the region are also being hit by a cooling technology sector, which had buoyed powerhouses like Taiwan and Singapore for much of the past couple of years.

Bloomberg Intelligence analysts point to other economic data showing worsening conditions. Smaller dry bulk ships, which are “workhorses of global trade and not just China-dependent,” are signaling an unprecedented decline in activity, which probably means a deepening global industrial slowdown, according to BI analysts Rahul Kapoor and Chris Muckensturm.

From Apple Inc. to Caterpillar Inc., companies are feeling the pain. Caterpillar, the bulldozer manufacturer, posted its biggest quarterly profit shortfall in a decade on Monday, while Nvidia Corp., the largest maker of chips for computer graphics cards, cited deteriorating conditions in China for weaker consumer demand for its products.

A Bloomberg dashboard of 10 critical global trade indicators now shows two flashing red, with a couple more -- expectations of German businesses and of China’s exporters -- poised to slip into below-average territory.

Other third-party gauges also offer warning signs for the world’s exporters. An Asia exports index created by analysts at Nomura Holdings Inc., which is meant to give a three-months-ahead read on export growth in Asia ex-Japan, is at its worst level since October 2016.

--With assistance from Myungshin Cho and Anisah Shukry.

To contact the reporter on this story: Michelle Jamrisko in Singapore at mjamrisko@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Nasreen Seria at nseria@bloomberg.net, Malcolm Scott

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