Summary – Services and Composite PMI data
The Caixin China Composite PMI™ data (which covers both manufacturing and services) indicated that Chinese business activity continued to rise strongly during April. This was shown by the Composite Output Index posting above the neutral 50.0 value at 52.7, which was down only slightly from a nine-month high of 52.9 in March.
Data broken down by sector signalled that the increase in overall business activity was largely driven by services companies. Notably, the seasonally adjusted Chinese Services Business Activity Index edged up from 54.4 in March to 54.5 in April, to mark its second-highest level since May 2012 (after January 2018). Meanwhile, manufacturing firms registered only a marginal increase in production at the start of the second quarter.
The rise in services activity was supported by a further strong increase in new business across the sector. This was despite the rate of new order growth softening slightly since March. According to panellists, improved marketing strategies, new product offerings and firmer underlying market demand supported the latest increase in sales. The amount of new work received by manufacturing companies meanwhile increased only slightly. Consequently, composite new orders expanded at a modest rate that was softer than that seen in March.
The amount of new export work received by services companies rose at the sharpest pace since the series began in late-2014 in April. A number of firms commented on stronger demand across key markets and greater efforts to develop foreign client bases. In contrast, manufacturing export sales slipped back into decline, though the rate of reduction was only slight. At the composite level, new export orders fell marginally following an increase at the end of the first quarter.
Employment trends diverged by sector in April, with service providers adding to their payroll numbers while manufacturers signalled a decline. Though modest, the latest increase in service sector staffing levels was the quickest recorded for 10 months, with some firms linking growth to greater amounts of new business. Meanwhile, workforce numbers at manufacturers declined slightly, following the first increase for over five years in March. As a result, employment at the composite level rose at a marginal pace that was similar to that seen in March.
Services companies in China continued to signal a lack of pressure on operating capacities in April, as highlighted by a further decline in outstanding workloads. That said, the rate of backlog depletion was the slowest seen in the year to date. The amount of unfinished business at manufacturing companies meanwhile continued to increase, though the rate of accumulation was the weakest seen for three years. Overall, lower backlogs at services firms offset the rise at goods producers to leave outstanding work unchanged at the composite level.
Operating expenses continued to rise at service providers, with the rate of input price inflation the steepest recorded since September 2018. Manufacturing businesses registered only a marginal increase in purchasing costs during April. At the composite level, input costs rose at a modest pace that was the fastest seen for five months.
Latest data indicated that both manufacturing and services companies increased their charges at the start of the second quarter. That said, factory gate prices rose at only a fractional pace. Service providers meanwhile hiked their charges at a rate that, though marginal, was the quickest seen since June 2018, which some companies linked to firmer demand conditions.
Business confidence remained relatively subdued across China in April amid concerns over the strength of the global economy. At services companies, sentiment edged down to its joint-lowest in five months. Manufacturers meanwhile saw optimism improve slightly to an 11-month high but remain relatively soft overall.
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