October 15, 2021

China GDP data to show hit from property to energy crises

By ellen

BEIJING (BLOOMBERG) – China’s economy is being hit from all sides – a property slump, energy crisis, weak consumer sentiment and soaring raw material costs – and government data on Monday (Oct 18) will show just how bad things are looking.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg predict a slowdown in gross domestic product (GDP) growth to 5 per cent in the third quarter from 7.9 per cent in the previous three months, and a weakening in monthly industrial production and investment figures last month. Retail sales may show a pickup after a major virus outbreak was contained.

The outlook for the world’s second-largest economy has darkened in recent months following a worsening in the property market and a shock electricity shortage that forced factories to curb output or shut down completely. Economists have been steadily downgrading their growth forecasts for the year – some like Nomura Holdings predict it could drop to as low as 7.7 per cent – with ripple effects for the rest of the world.

“It’s not an optimistic picture for the third quarter’s growth, especially as the low-base effect is fading,” said China economist Liu Peiqian at NatWest Markets in Singapore. “In the third quarter, the authorities prioritised longer-term reform goals and were less focused on the short-term growth target.”

Here are some of the key things to watch from the data, which is due for release at 10am local time on Monday:

Property slowdown

Beijing has steadily tightened restrictions on the property market in a bid to curb financial risks, causing a slump in construction and exacerbating a liquidity crisis at developer China Evergrande Group, resulting in a broader spillover in the industry. The combined sales of China’s top 100 developers plummeted 36 per cent year-on-year last month, which is traditionally a peak season for home sales. That will have a knock-on effect on the broader economy, since Goldman Sachs estimates the property sector and related downstream industries make up almost a quarter of GDP.

With strained cash flow, developers are unlikely to splash out on new investment. Growth in real estate investment likely slowed to 9.5 per cent in the nine months through last month from a year earlier, down from 10.9 per cent in August, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

Power crunch

Factories were forced to halt production because of electricity shortages during the second half of last month, causing the purchasing managers index to slump below 50 for the first time since the coronavirus pandemic started last year, a sign of contraction in manufacturing. However, strong export data and rising electricity consumption last month suggest the impact of the power crisis on industrial production may be more mixed.

Electricity consumption in the secondary industry increased 6 per cent year on year, implying strong industrial activity despite power outages, Goldman Sachs analysts said in a note. Power usage data can be volatile though, they said, and could deviate from industrial production trends, based on past results. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg predict industrial production growth slowed to 3.9 per cent last month from a year ago, which would match the pace in April last year.

Consumer caution

China has had to deal with its widest Covid-19 outbreak since the virus first emerged in late 2019 after cases of the Delta variant began spreading from mid-July. The authorities managed to bring the resurgence under control by the end of last month but the country’s stringent zero-tolerance strategy has left a scar on consumption.

Local governments started to relax virus controls since late August, which may have helped retail sales in last month. Service sector activity also reported a stronger-than-expected recovery in the month, according to the official purchasing managers’ surveys. Retail sales growth likely accelerated to 3.5 per cent last month from 2.5 per cent in August, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

Booming exports

Unexpectedly robust export growth last month was one of the few highlights in the economy in a sea of bad news. Appetite for Chinese goods in advanced economies remained strong, partly because overseas buyers have diverted orders from other emerging economies like Vietnam, which have struggled to get Delta virus outbreaks under control. Many buyers are also trying to front-load their Christmas shopping orders to cope with global supply chain problems.

The surging trade surplus is one reason why the renminbi has continued to strengthen this year even as the growth outlook worsened. Those gains may be starting to worry policymakers now, with the People’s Bank of China setting the renminbi fixing at a weaker-than-expected rate on Thursday, prompting the currency to drop from a four-month high.