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HSBC: China Manufacturing Gauge Picks Up in September

China's manufacturing sector saw a surprise pick-up in September, a closely watched survey showed Tuesday, but economists warned a slowdown in the key property sector was an ongoing risk to growth.

HSBC said its preliminary purchasing managers index (PMI) advanced to a two-month high of 50.5, higher than a final reading of 50.2 in August and providing some respite after a string of weak data pointing to a slowdown in world's second-largest economy.

A reading above 50 indicates the sector is expanding.

Concerns over China's economy -- a key driver of global growth -- have intensified following a string of lacklustre recent data, with economists calling for authorities to take further action to kickstart growth.

Qu Hongbin, HSBC's chief economist for China, said that while the result indicated manufacturing sector activity was stabilizing this month, expansion was still modest.

"The property downturn remains the biggest downside risk to growth," he said in the statement.

"We continue to expect more monetary easing from the PBoC (People's Bank of China) in order to steady the recovery," he added.

Since April, Chinese authorities have introduced a string of measures to boost growth, including small business tax breaks, targeted infrastructure spending and incentives to spur lending in rural areas and to small companies.

And last week reports said the PBoC would pump $81 billion into the country's top five banks to spur lending to companies.

- Fears over property slowdown -

Economists, however, have warned that the effect of the stimulus measures introduced since April is waning and they worry that a slowdown in the crucial property sector, where new home prices have fallen for four straight months, could derail chances of a rebound.

Earlier this month, the government said industrial production growth slowed sharply in August to its lowest level for more than five years, while expansion in retail sales and fixed asset investment also weakened.

Julian Evans-Pritchard, China economist at Capital Economics, said that while the PMI result indicated manufacturing had been boosted by demand for exports, the economy still had hurdles to surmount, property in particular.

"Policymakers have remained relatively calm in the face of this quarter's slowdown," he wrote in a comment on the PMI. "Despite all the fuss over the recent liquidity injections by the People's Bank, there has been no significant monetary easing," he added.

Indeed, Finance Minister Lou Jiwei said at a weekend meeting that authorities would not make any significant policy adjustments even though downward pressure on economic growth remains, according to a government statement.

Those comments followed ones earlier this month by Premier Li Keqiang, who in an address to a World Economic Forum meeting in China called for taking a long-term and comprehensive approach to managing the economy, suggesting the government was not overly concerned.

China's economy grew a higher-than-expected 7.5 percent in the second quarter, up from 7.4 percent in the previous three months, which was the worst since a similar 7.4 percent expansion in July-September 2012.

Beijing is targeting expansion of about 7.5 percent this year, the same as last year's objective, as it tries to pull off a delicate transformation of the country's growth model whereby consumer spending becomes the main driver rather than investment.

Source: Agence France Presse


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