UPDATE 1-China industrial output growth falls to 17-yr low, but investment picks up
China is ramping up support for the economy this year as growth looks set to plumb 29-year lows. Premier Li Keqiang last week announced hundreds of billions of dollars in additional tax cuts and infrastructure spending, even as officials vowed they would not resort to massive stimulus like in the past. Industrial output rose 5.3 percent in January-February, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said, less than expected and the slowest pace since early 2002. Factory output growth had been expected to slow to 5.5 percent from December's 5.7 percent.
An official factory survey showed manufacturing output contracted in February for the first time since January 2009, while factory-gate inflation in February hovered at multi-year lows, pointing to further pressure on industrial profits. China's manufacturers are facing weaker sales at home and abroad, with exports hit by U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods and cooling global demand. China's exports to all of its major markets fell across the board last month.
China combines January and February activity data in an attempt to smooth distortions created by the long Lunar New Year holidays early each year, but some analysts say a clearer picture of the economy's health may not emerge until first-quarter data is released in April. Fixed-asset investment growth quickened to 6.1 percent in the first two months of this year.
Analysts polled by Reuters had expected it to rise 6.0 percent, edging up marginally from 5.9 percent in 2018. Private sector fixed-asset investment rose 7.5 percent in the same period, easing from an increase of 8.7 percent in 2018. Private investment accounts for about 60 percent of overall investment in China.
Growth in infrastructure spending, a powerful economic driver in previous years, picked up to 4.3 percent on-year, compared with a rise of 3.8 percent last year. China is trying to engineer a construction boom to rekindle demand and kickstart the economy, even as it steps up support measures to keep cash-starved smaller companies afloat, ranging from tax cuts to financial incentives for firms which do not cut staff.
Retail sales were marginally better than expected, with the headline figure rising 8.2 percent in January-February from a year earlier, in line with December. Earlier this week, industry data showed automobile sales in China fell for the eighth consecutive month in February, adding to concerns about weaker consumer confidence. nL3N20Y1O6]
China's state planner announced measures in January to boost consumption of goods ranging from eco-friendly appliances to big-ticket items such as cars, but the size and scope of the subsidy scheme is still unclear. But sales of appliances and furniture softened considerably early in the year, possibly linked to a 3.6 percent drop in home sales.
(Reporting by Lusha Zhang, Stella Qiu and Beijing Monitoring Desk; Editing by Kim Coghill)
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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