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What Is the Economy Really Doing, and Where Is It Going?

2012-04-29 00:00:00ByStephenGreen,LanShen
China’s foreign Trade 2012年3期

China’s official GDP statistics say the economy grew 8.9% in Q4-2011, and 9.2% for the year –pretty quick. Given widely held expectations of a slower Q4 and general scepticism on China’s economy, some might wonder whether these numbers are accurate. At times of stress, we know that China’s GDP numbers can appear a little weird. In late 2008, we recommended a number of growth proxies to watch in case the GDP numbers became less reliable, including electricity production, freight traffic, and production of key industrial goods. All of these proxies suggested a deeper downturn in late 2008 and early 2009 than the official GDP numbers showed. In this note, we check in on those proxies, and they suggest that the economy is indeed continuing to expand, albeit at a more moderate pace than in 2011.

We also take a quick look around the property sector. We find that the construction slowdown has clearly begun, and will get deeper. There is still considerable pain ahead.

The December data

Officially, China’s GDP grew by 8.9% y/y in Q4, better than the market consensus of 8.7%. According to our estimated q/q seasonally adjusted annualised rate (SAAR), growth accelerated to 9.3% in Q4 from 8.5% in Q3, as we show in Chart 1. We cannot square this with the official q/q growth numbers: 2.0% in Q4, down from 2.3% in Q2 and Q3.

Beneath this strong figure, an investment-led slowdown is in play. Fixed asset investment (FAI) fell sharply in Q4. In nominal terms, y/y FAI growth dropped to 20.4% in Q4 (from 29.5% in Q3), and in real terms it slid to 12.3% from 20.6% prior (see Chart 3). This is where the slowdown is concentrated as both infrastructure and the property sector suffer a continuing credit crunch.

Industrial production (IP), however, remains robust, growing 12.8% y/y in December (against 12.4% in November). The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) even claims that IP grew by some 1% m/m in each month of Q4, even while the PMI index for manufacturing flatlined around 50. It is possible that the unweighted PMI is not capturing growth at larger firms.

Consumption growth remained robust. Retail sales growth accelerated to 18.1% y/y in December in nominal terms (from 17.3% in November), and to 13.8% y/y in real terms (12.8% prior). The urban household survey found disposable incomes up 9.1% y/y in real terms in Q4, compared to 7.1% y/y in Q1. Household spending also accelerated to 7.6% y/y in Q4, from 6.2% in Q3 and 5.5% in Q2 (see Chart 2). If accurate, these numbers indicate that the negative effects of inflation are fading and that China’s consumers are continuing to spend. One multinational client we spoke to recently, who sells clothes across China, also saw no signs of a slowdown. But other domestic retailers, both highand low-end, reported an obvious slowdown in sales in Q4-2011, which they feared would continue into Q1-2012.

Upward wage pressure looks set to continue in 2012, though not to the same extent as in 2011. We expect manufacturing wages to rise another 10% on average this year; this, along with our forecast of 2% CPI inflation for 2012, will mean households should continue to benefit from real income growth.

Growth proxies

Overall, the growth proxies we track tell the same story as the official GDP data. However, for most of the proxies, we only have data until November 2011.

Freight traffic: Pretty solid

The advantage of looking at freight traffic is that there is little reason to fake the data. The disadvantage is that, unlike GDP, it is not a value-added measure. The air freight market has collapsed, but it is a volatile business. Other freight sectors suggest much more stable growth through November 2011, as Chart 4 shows. Carriage of goods on roads is particularly important, and it grew a robust 20% y/y in OctoberNovember 2011.

Energy production: Softening a bit

Electricity growth is soft, as Chart 5 shows, suggesting that IP growth will also weaken in the coming months.

Air travel: Below average but steady

Domestic air travel, measured in person trips, is running at around 10% y/ y and has even strengthened a bit in recent months. Chart 6 shows the varying fates of the Chinese, Asian and global economies in the last few years. International arrivals tChina cratered during the global financial crisis and dipped sharply in earl 2011.Regional arrivals, from Hong Kong for instance, also weakened more than local travel during the crisis and have been fairly steady in recent months. Local air travel did not decline as sharply as international or regional travel in 2008-09, and has glided to a below-average but steady path.

Cement and steel: Weakening, in line with FAI

Proxies for infrastructure and property are weaker, reflecting the slowdown in FAI growth. As Chart 7 shows, crude steel production growth hit 0% y/y in November, though it seems to have bounced back a little in December. Cement production growth is weakening too, and is running below the 12% average rate of the last decade. And finally, the property sector

The correction has begun. Residential housing investment hit a 30-month low of 10.8% y/y in December(19.6% y/y in Q4), compared to 35.7% in the first three quarters of 2011. Floor space under construction fell 25% y/y in December (Chart 8 shows the 3-month moving average, which softens the decline); this suggests that investment in this sector has much further to contract.

Sales volumes declined substantially in Q4. Residential floor space sold fell 8.4% y/y in December (following average growth of 12.9% in Q3-2011). Completed residential floor space is still growing, up 9.3% y/y in December. This is resulting in rising apartment inventories. Expectations of price rises in Tier 1-3 cities appear to be reversing, and developers have been cutting prices since October in an attempt to shift inventory.

Prices will likely continue to fall. In Q2-2012, we expect the central government to begin signalling a policy shift to stabilise the sector. At the March National People’s Congress meetings, local officials will be lobbying aggressively for relief. Once prices have come down, we expect Beijing to start gradually easing some of the propertymarket restrictions imposed in the past year in order to encourage first-time buyers into the market. This sector, though, remains the biggest risk to China’s economy. Policy outlook

If anything, today’s data is another reason not to expect a quick move to further loosening. The economy is slowing, but not dramatically – so far.

The failure of the expected required reserve ratio (RRR) cut to materialise before the Lunar New Year is a disappointment (there are four more working days to go before the markets close). The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) instead engaged in an open reverse repo transaction with banks today in order to provide liquidity before the holiday – and there are reports of at least two other liquidityproviding actions between the central bank and large local banks. Liquidity is tight, but the PBoC has been actively managing liquidity, and we do not ex- pect it to get tighter. Deposits should come back into the banks after the holiday, which will boost interbank liquidity, so we might have to wait a while for the next RRR cut.

The investment slowdown, though, will be a drag on IP growth in Q1-2012. Exports continue to weaken (they are only growing by 4% y/y in real terms now; and the housing market will correct more. We look for more ‘interesting times’ ahead – and 6% q/q SAAR GDP growth. Under these circumstances, more monetary loosening will come, but only slowly. We still look for Q1 to be the bottom of growth momentum – but these numbers, though strong, raise the possibility that the coming slowdown will push into Q2 as well.

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