China's July factory price growth quickens, adds to business and broad economic pressures

  • 8/9/2021
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BEIJING (Reuters) -China’s factory gate inflation in July rose at a faster clip from the previous month and exceeded market expectations, adding to strains on an economy losing recovery momentum as businesses struggle with high raw material costs. The world’s second-biggest economy is on track to expand more than 8% this year but analysts say pent-up coronavirus demand has peaked and forecast growth to moderate amid supply chain bottle necks and outbreaks of the Delta variant of COVID-19. The producer price index (PPI) grew 9.0% from a year earlier, matching the high seen in May, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said in a statement on Monday. Analysts in a Reuters poll had expected the PPI to rise 8.8%, unchanged from June. Consumer inflation slowed slightly, the data showed, giving policymakers room to act if required. China’s economy has largely recovered from disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, but the expansion is losing steam as businesses face intensifying strains from higher commodity prices and global supply chain bottlenecks. “We believe domestic inflationary pressure is largely controllable, and Beijing will unlikely overreact to the stronger-than-expected July inflation data,” analysts from Nomura wrote in a note. “Instead, we expect Beijing to maintain its unique policy mix of ‘targeted tightening + universal easing’ through the remainder of this year.” China cut the amount of cash that banks must hold as reserves in July, releasing around 1 trillion yuan ($154.40 billion). Many analysts expect another cut later in the year. The global spread of the more-infectious Delta variant of the virus and new outbreaks of cases at home, on top of recent heavy rainfall and floods in some Chinese provinces have also disrupted economic activity. “The pandemic worsened and caused more disruption in the global supply chain,” said Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management. The PPI, a benchmark gauge of a country’s industrial profitability, inched up 0.5% on a monthly basis, accelerating from a 0.3% uptick in June. ECONOMY LOSING MOMENTUM Higher crude oil prices and increased demand for thermal coal as China copes with hot weather helped drive up prices, said Dong Lijuan, an official with NBS, in a statement released alongside the data. Prices in the coal mining and washing and ferrous metal extraction industries jumped 45.7% and 54.6% in July year on-year, respectively. China’s “zero tolerance” policy to COVID cases will probably put further stress on the supply chain, and inflation pressure may persist in the second half, said Zhang. China reported 125 new cases of COVID-19 on the mainland for Aug. 8, with most local infections in the central province of Henan and the eastern province of Jiangsu. Uncertainties caused by the fresh outbreak in China and government response measures led analysts from Goldman Sachs and Barclays to recently revise down their third quarter growth forecasts. The country’s export growth unexpectedly slowed in July, with firms citing extra pressure from high raw material costs. China, as the top steel consumer of both coal and iron ore, has stepped up efforts to tame rising commodity prices that have squeezed manufacturers’ margins, including stepping up inspections on trading platforms and releasing state reserves. Benchmark iron ore futures on the Dalian Commodity Exchange fell 13.1% in July, the steepest drop since February 2020. A separate NBS statement showed that the consumer price index (CPI) in July rose 1.0% from a year earlier, compared with a 1.1% gain in June and below the government target of around 3% this year. The Reuters poll forecast the index to inch up 0.8%. On a month-on-month basis, the CPI rose 0.3%, compared with a 0.2% increase tipped by the poll and June’s 0.4% decline. The core consumer price index, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, stood at 1.3% on year, versus a 0.9% rise in June. ($1 = 6.4766 Chinese yuan renminbi) Reporting by Liangping Gao and Gabriel Crossley Editing by Shri Navaratnam Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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