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China’s Manufacturing Sector Keeps Getting Whacked by Trump

In the PMI report, the index showing prices at the factory door continue to decline.

China’s Manufacturing Sector Keeps Getting Whacked by Trump
Sparks fly as employees work on the chassis of a Trumpchi brand vehicle on a production line at the Guangzhou Automobile Group Co. Ltd. (GAC) plant in Guangzhou, China. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) --

The outlook for China’s manufacturing sector deteriorated further in August, underlining the weakness in the domestic economy just as a new round of tariffs kicks in.

The manufacturing purchasing managers’ index dropped to 49.5, according to data released Saturday by the National Bureau of Statistics, with sub-gauges showing that domestic and new overseas orders contracted. On Sunday, higher U.S. tariffs on roughly $110 billion in Chinese imports took effect, as did Beijing’s retaliatory duties on U.S. goods coming the other way.

China’s Manufacturing Sector Keeps Getting Whacked by Trump

U.S President Donald Trump’s tariff war continues to heap pressure on China’s economy and policy makers at a time when economic output already is in a long-term deceleration. Until now, officials have stuck doggedly to a relatively limited roster of stimulus measures out of concern that more ambitious support would further swell indebtedness and over-inflate the frothy property market.

“While we find Beijing’s self-restraint admirable, we are unsure whether this well-intended master plan could be put into practice, as the risks to growth may have been underestimated,” analysts at Nomura International Ltd. including Lu Ting wrote in a note. Toward the end of the year the government “may be compelled to increase credit growth and ease its tightening measures on property markets again.”

The government is not sounding the alarm just yet. Late Sunday, the State Council, China’s cabinet, released a statement saying that overall risks are “controllable” and the economy is stable. At the same time, counter-cyclical adjustments in economic policy will be increased, according to the statement.

A different, private gauge focused more on smaller companies showed manufacturing returning to expansion. The Caixin PMI rose to 50.4 in August from 49.9 in July, in data released Monday. In Saturday’s official data there was a pickup in the PMI for small firms, although it was still in contraction.

Export Contraction

The official data’s sub-index gauging new export orders rose to 47.2, but was still in contraction, while new orders contracted further. The extra tariffs now will hit manufacturers harder.

What Bloomberg’s Economists Say

The fall further into contraction of the official PMI, with almost all the sub-components weakening, shows the need for more policy support is growing more urgent.

While the Caixin PMI returned to expansion, “we are not convinced it indicates a genuine improvement in China’s export sector -- the focus of the survey. The rise was mainly driven by the production side.”

-- David Qu and Chang Shu, Bloomberg Economics

Click here for the full notes

The Trump administration imposed additional 15% duties on consumer goods ranging from footwear and apparel to home textiles and certain technology products like the Apple Watch. A separate batch of about $160 billion in Chinese goods -- including laptops and cellphones -- will be hit with 15% tariffs on Dec. 15.

That’s pushing many American companies to move manufacturing out of China to avoid being affected. Abercrombie & Fitch Co. is pushing to reduce its dependence on suppliers in China by more than 40% from last year’s level, but some companies are struggling to do that. Gunmaker American Outdoor Brands Corp. has tried to shift some manufacturing to other countries, but found their supply chains aren’t as sophisticated as China’s and the same components aren’t available.

In response to the U.S. actions, China targeted U.S. agricultural and manufacturing centers in the Midwest and South, with higher tariffs on soybeans and other farm goods plus increased charges on U.S. autos -- where duties can now total as much as 50%.

In the official PMI report, the index showing prices at the factory door continued to decline, although the renewed contraction of input prices should relieve some of the pressure on company profits.

The economy slowed in July and a set of early data collated by Bloomberg showed the trend continuing in August, with poor sales managers’ sentiment and falling trade. However, an improvement in small business confidence is a sign that earlier pro-growth measures may be having an effect.

Small Business Glimmer

Economists continue to warn that the trade war risks dragging the global economy into recession, a development that would ultimately feed through into Chinese domestic demand. For now, officials may take some encouragement from the relative strength of the services and construction PMI index, which rose marginally in August and remains in expansion.

That partly reflects the long-term shift of the economy away from investment and exports and toward a consumption-led growth model.

There are signs that the rapid escalation in the trade war in recent weeks could be topping out. Last week China indicated that it wouldn’t immediately retaliate against the next round of higher U.S. duties. Trump indicated Friday that negotiations between the two nations slated for September are still going ahead.

China’s Manufacturing Sector Keeps Getting Whacked by Trump

With each new downbeat data release, however, Chinese policy makers face greater pressure to abandon their restrained stimulus approach.

“In a macro environment with a weaker credit cycle and falling nominal growth, there is room and urgency for monetary policy to loosen, in order to prevent real interest rates from rising further,” economists at China International Capital Corp. led by Yuan Yue wrote.

--With assistance from Yinan Zhao and Rachel Chang.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Miao Han in Beijing at mhan22@bloomberg.net;Tomoko Sato in Tokyo at tsato3@bloomberg.net

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

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg