(Apr 17): China’s economy rebounded through the first quarter, offering the government room for maneuver as trade negotiations with the US enter a crucial stage.
Gross domestic product rose 6.4% in the first three months from a year earlier -- matching last quarter’s pace and beating economists’ estimates. Factory output in March jumped 8.5% from a year earlier, much higher than forecast. Retail sales expanded 8.7% while investment was up 6.3% in the year to date.
The numbers are a reversal from as recently as January when key readings were pointing to a pronounced downturn. US officials had previously touted such weakness as leverage in their push for a trade agreement.
“President Trump and other US officials spent much of the last year saying that China’s slowdown was making Beijing desperate for a deal,” said Michael Hirson, Practice Head, China and Northeast Asia at Eurasia Group and a former US Treasury Department official. “Now that China’s growth is recovering, Trump and team will be getting more questions from pundits and the media about whether his leverage is slipping away.”
Late-stage Negotiations
While the better data isn’t likely to radically alter the course of negotiations that are already in their late stages, at the very least they will change the atmosphere, Hirson said.
White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow, who in January described China’s economy as “very weak," on Tuesday said the negotiations are making “very good progress.”
The exchange of tit for tat tariffs last year between the world’s two-biggest economies on roughly US$360 billion ($487 billion) worth of each others goods had dragged on global growth and hammered sentiment before both governments agreed a truce.
Car production grew in March for the first time since September, showing manufacturers might be more optimistic after the sales slump last year. Aluminum and steel output also reached records in the first quarter as producers ramped up operations amid prospects for better demand in the world’s biggest commodities consumer.
The robust data stoked skepticism as critics said authorities are again relying on cheap credit to stoke lending and demand. Investment by state-owned firms quickened to 6.7% and slowed for private firms to 6.4%, underscoring the government’s role in supporting growth.
“I think policymakers, who were choosing “deleveraging” over the past two years, are now back to increasing leverage,” said Alex Wolf, head of investment strategy at JP Morgan Private Bank in Asia.
Not All Good News
It wasn’t all good news either: The surveyed jobless rate remained over 5% for a third month and the nominal growth rate, which is un-adjusted for price trends, decelerated. That means slower corporate profits.
The reports led some economists to conclude that the data mean policy makers will scale back stimulus measures that had been penciled in for the year. The central bank may be already starting to do that, withdrawing some of the long-term funding it supplies banks on Wednesday.
“First quarter and March data confirm a cyclical turning point,” Morgan Stanley economists including Robin Xing in Hong Kong wrote in a note. Reserve-ratio cuts “could be fewer amid strong fiscal support. We expect an economic upturn in the second to fourth quarters as fiscal easing fully kicks in, trade tensions ease, and consumer confidence normalises.”
For the global economy and for China’s trade negotiators, that’s a marked turnaround from the gloomy outlook seen just a few months ago.
“It strengthens China’s hand,” said Cui Li, head of macro research at CCB International Holdings in Hong Kong. “With the strong data, it’s easier to make a win-win argument that China will help the global economy to achieve a soft landing, and everyone is better off without the uncertainties as global growth slows.”