Showing posts with label Zhiwei Zhang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zhiwei Zhang. Show all posts

First Insights: China: HSBC flash manufacturing PMI rebounds in March

Economics Research | Asia Ex-Japan

21 March 2013

First Insights: China: HSBC flash manufacturing PMI rebounds in March

The HSBC China flash manufacturing PMI rebounded to 51.7 in March from 50.4 in February, much stronger than expected (Consensus: 50.8; Nomura: 51.0). The 1.3 percentage point (pp) jump in March cannot be explained by seasonal factors alone. Since the HSBC PMI data started in 2005, there have been four years when the lunar new year holiday fell in February; in these years, the PMI rose by an average of 0.6pp in March.

China: Rising risks of financial crisis

Asia Special Report: China: Rising risks of financial crisis

· China is displaying the same three symptoms that Japan, the US and parts of Europe all showed before suffering financial crises: a rapid build-up of leverage, elevated property prices and a decline in potential growth.

First Insights: China: Another round of policy tightening in the property sector

Economics Research | Asia Ex-Japan
01 March 2013

First Insights: China: Another round of policy tightening in the property sector

The government announced today a set of new tightening policies in the property market, including: (1) imposing a 20% capital gain tax on property transactions; (2) the PBoC to raise the down payment requirement and mortgage rate in cities, where property prices have risen quickly; and (3) extending the "local resident" requirement to cities, where property prices have increased swiftly and (4) for cities with "local resident" requirements, such policies shall be implemented in a more restrictive way.

First Insights: China: HSBC flash PMI drops surprisingly

Economics Research | Asia Ex-Japan
25 February 2013

First Insights: China: HSBC flash PMI drops surprisingly

The HSBC flash PMI dropped surprisingly to 50.4 in February from 52.3 in January (Consensus: 52.2; Nomura: 53.3). The new orders subcomponent fell to 50.9 from 53.1 in January and new export orders to 49.8 from 53.7. The output subcomponent fell to 50.9 from 53.1, while that for the stock of finished goods rose slightly to 49.8 from 49.6.

First Insights: China: Fuel price hikes add to inflationary pressures

Economics Research | Asia Ex-Japan | Nomura
25 February 2013

First Insights: China: Fuel price hikes add to inflationary pressures

China last night announced a hike in gasoline and diesel retail prices, effective today. Increases of 3.5% and 3.8% have been applied, respectively, adding RMB300 and RMB290 to the prices per ton. This is the second major price hike announced in five days – on 20 February we saw the largest hike in the rail freight tariff rate since 2003, which was unusual in terms of timing as tariff hikes in Q1 are not common.

First Insights: China: Government announces reform plan to improve income distribution

First Insights: China: Government announces reform plan to improve income distribution

The Chinese government announced its plan to reform income distribution today. This is an important reform plan which has been debated by the government for many years. Our comments:

First Insights: China: Surprise fall in official PMI

Economics Research | Asia Ex-Japan
01 February 2013

First Insights: China: Surprise fall in official PMI

China’s official PMI dropped surprisingly to 50.4 in January from 50.6 in December (Consensus 51.0, Nomura 50.9), which casts some doubt on the strength and sustainability of the growth recovery.
Sub-indexes show mixed signals. Output was down to 51.3 from 52.0, but new orders rose to 51.6 from 51.2 and while inventories of finished goods fell to 47.4 from 49.4, which suggests that the PMI may improve next month.

The improvement of new orders was mostly driven by domestic demand as export orders fell. Input prices rose sharply to 57.2 from 53.3, reinforcing our view that inflation may surprise on the upside in 2013.

Economists
Zhiwei Zhang

First Insights: China: Trade slows but the growth recovery remains on track

First Insights: China: Trade slows but the growth recovery remains on track Export growth slowed to 2.9% y-o-y in November from 11.6% in October (Consensus 9%, Nomura 7%), while import growth slowed to 0% from 2.4% (Consensus 2.0%, Nomura 0%).