China's factory activity snaps record slump on festive stockpiling
The official purchasing managers' index (PMI) rose to 50.1 in December from 49.2 in November, the National Bureau of Statistics' survey showed on Wednesday (31 December), topping the 50-point mark separating growth from contraction and beating a forecast of 49.2 in a Reuters poll.
Highlights:
- China's manufacturing PMI tops growth threshold to 50.1
- Non-manufacturing PMI rises to 50.2 from 29.5 in November
- Separate private-sector survey also shows marginal growth
- Economists doubt momentum can last
China's factory activity unexpectedly grew in December, snapping a record eight straight months of decline, lifted by a rise in pre-holiday orders as officials seek to spur the $19 trillion economy's manufacturing sector without worsening deflation.
The official purchasing managers' index (PMI) rose to 50.1 in December from 49.2 in November, the National Bureau of Statistics' survey showed today (31 December), topping the 50-point mark separating growth from contraction and beating a forecast of 49.2 in a Reuters poll.
"Assuming the improvement in the PMIs is borne out in the hard data, we think it will likely be a short-lived upturn in activity on the back of month-to-month swings in fiscal spending rather than the start of a more sustained pick-up," said Julian Evans-Pritchard, head of China economics at Capital Economics.
"The big picture is that the structural headwinds from the property downturn and industrial overcapacity are set to persist in 2026," he added.
Still, the data should give policymakers cause for optimism after choosing to see out 2025 without major additional stimulus to meet the full-year growth target of around 5%.
The production sub-index jumped to 51.7 from 50.0 in November, while new orders climbed to 50.8 from 49.2, marking their strongest performance since March. Supplier delivery times also improved, pushing the production and activity expectations component to 55.5, its highest reading since March 2024.
New export orders remained sluggish, however, edging up to 49.0 from November's 47.6, underscoring the need for officials to boost domestic demand and rely less on U.S. demand, the world's top consumer market, in the face of President Donald Trump's tariffs.
Huo Lihui, an NBS statistician, said confidence appeared to be improving due to pre-holiday stockpiling, as the world's second-largest economy prepares to celebrate the Lunar New Year in February, pointing to an uptick in the agricultural, food processing and food and beverage sectors.
A separate private-sector PMI published today (31 December) also showed marginal expansion in activity in December, driven by stronger production and domestic demand in the absence of more foreign orders.
Depressed domestic demand
Ginning up domestic manufacturing without taking further steps to boost consumer demand risks worsening deflationary pressures, however.
In separate data released last week, Chinese industrial firms saw their profits fall 13.1% year-on-year in November, the steepest drop in over a year, suggesting households are not stepping in to pick up the shortfall as a slowing global economy weighs on exports.
At an agenda-setting gathering in early December, the ruling Communist Party leadership promised to boost income and stimulate consumption, although similar pledges in the past have struggled to deliver results.
