Home Info-Graphs ChartBrief 122 – China PMI Bad And Good

ChartBrief 122 – China PMI Bad And Good

Advertisement Disclosure: When you purchase through our sponsored links, we may earn a commission from our partners. By using this website you agree to our T&Cs.

The official manufacturing PMI for China came in at 51.4 in July (51.5 expected, 51.7 previous), and the non-manufacturing PMI at 54.5 (54.9 previous). So at a headline level and at first glance the numbers were down and dissapointed against expectations. The 3-month moving average of the two combined was up +0.1 to 53.0 – which is part of the “good” news within the reports, and lines up with the improvement seen in the copper price, as displayed in the chart below. Indeed, the China stimulus/property induced rebound has been a key driver for commodities and is a front-of-mind theme for us.

Great Investors Debate – Should You Be Investing In Family-Controlled Businesses?

Goldman: China’s Economy Is Improving, But Concerns Remain

Into the details let’s review the bad and good. On the manufacturing PMI, it was large companies up (+0.2 to 52.9) and medium and small down (-0.9 to 49.6 and -1.2 to 48.9 respectively) – this goes to show that it’s the large SOEs doing the heavy lifting (at the direction of the govt) vs the smaller companies which are still under pressure. On the non-manufacturing PMI, services were down -0.7pts to 52.9, yet the construction side was still booming +1.1 to 62.5 – a sign that the property sector is still going strong and carrying growth. Yet another point, was that the breadth of the manufacturing PMI improved (graph 1 below).

Overall it’s property and SOEs that are driving growth, with an added tailwind from improved global trade activity, and my take on the data is that it’s reasonably good, if stimulus/property driven, and short-term supportive for commodities.

The manufacturing PMI was down on a headline basis, yet the breadth of the subindexes improved – overall on this front the Chinese economy is doing much better than a year or so ago.

The improvement in the trend of the combined PMI indicator is consistent with the strength seen in copper, and aligns with the conclusion that the short-term macro pulse is commodity positive.

China PMI Bad And Good

For institutional grade insights on the global economics and asset allocation, and some more good charts you may want to subscribe to the Weekly Macro Themes. Click through for a free trial.

Follow us on:

LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/topdown-charts

Twitter http://www.twitter.com/topdowncharts

Article by Callum Thomas, Top Down Charts

Our Editorial Standards

At ValueWalk, we’re committed to providing accurate, research-backed information. Our editors go above and beyond to ensure our content is trustworthy and transparent.

Top Down Charts
Editor

Want Financial Guidance Sent Straight to You?

  • Pop your email in the box, and you'll receive bi-weekly emails from ValueWalk.
  • We never send spam — only the latest financial news and guides to help you take charge of your financial future.