China's reopening rebound has faded
Our China Activity Indicator (CAI) is now sitting slightly below its pre-pandemic average, reflecting the normalization of services and a large drag from industry, real estate and trade (see Chart 1).
Chart 1. Our China Activity Indicator backs up the picture of a slowdown painted by the official data
Source: abrdn, Haver, Refinitiv, July 2023
Of course, parsing the extreme volatility introduced by the pandemic and re-opening process raises the risk that near-term moves are not illustrative of longer lasting malaise. The NBS now estimates that industrial production averaged around 8% month-over-month annualized growth over May and June. And we also found that industry was helping to counter drags from trade and real estate, lifting this CAI subindex off its April trough (see the gray line in Chart 1). But big questions remain as to what is going to drive growth for the rest of the year.
The real estate sector continues to slide, posing risks to other sectors and consumer confidence. New starts, residential fixed asset investment and building volumes have all fallen below their November lows, while developer funding is now back at its trough (see Chart 2). Moreover, pricing data also points to a weaker market – the proportion of cities reporting falling prices for existing residences is back at over 90%, while price falls have accelerated across tier 1 to tier 3 cities.
Chart 2. Where’s the bottom in real estate?
Source: abrdn, Haver, June 2023
The consumption recovery should still have room to run – the household saving rate only declined by 0.8pp in Q2, and at 31.8% it is still 1 to 1.5 percentage points above its steady state. This implies households are still accruing excess savings which could be drawn down if confidence returns. On the other hand, the monthly data suggests that services activity has not changed much over the past four months, potentially signaling that there is little appetite for more spending beyond the recovery seen thus far.
The PBOC’s Q2 surveys on household income and employment, which can provide an indication on future savings and consumption behavior, were little changed compared to Q1, and do not clearly point to a savings rate normalization in the near future, let alone a tapping of excess savings built up over the pandemic (see Chart 3).
Chart 3. The coiled spring of excess savings remains elusive
Source: abrdn, Haver, July 2023
Without some recovery in services momentum and a bottoming of the drag emanating from real estate, the 5% growth target may begin to be increasingly called into question. This is due to the revision to the GDP back data which reduces the statistical carry 2023, unwinding most of the carry delivered by the reprofiling that occurred with the Q1 GDP release; hence, even absent changes to growth forecasts for the remainder of the year, the (new) history weighs on the annual growth by around 0.3pp compared to the previous vintage. Calls for a serious policy easing continue to grow weakness in property, combined with the rise in youth unemployment to over 21% should spur further easing from policy makers.
Despite the 10bps rate cuts enacted in June, financial conditions continue to bounce around neutral, rather than shifting to a more outright supportive position. Our CFCI is sitting just below neutral as the loosening in Policy & Duration factors on the month was offset by tighter Money & Credit dynamics. Policy was successful in reducing the drag from Policy & Duration factors in June but has not been sufficient to move this towards an outright loosening in financial conditions yet. On the Money & Credit side, the upward surprise in the June credit data helped the credit impulse push higher, but this in turn was more than offset by a growing drag from monetary aggregates.
Chart 4. Chinese financial conditions still in neutral territory
Source: abrdn, Haver, Bloomberg, July 2023
Additional policy easing has become increasingly likely, and we expect that further steps – particularly via local governments – will be announced at July's Politburo meeting. But a substantial easing, which could unlock household and market confidence, still seems unlikely given the authorities will not want to lose progress made on de-risking the economy. Therefore, while we do expect a broader support package to be announced, the combination of reduced statistical carry, growing drag from real estate and the fading services rebound means we have trimmed our 2023 GDP forecast to 5.1% (-0.5pp).
Key Takeaways
- A soft Q2 GDP growth rate confirmed that China's recovery lost momentum, while revisions to previous data reduce the ‘statistical carry’ and therefore, pull down on our annual growth forecast.
- Our China Activity Indicator (CAI) moved down again in June, consistent with services exhausting their easy gains. In contrast, the industry, real estate & trade subindex stabilized on net, helped by an upward revision to some of the May data.
- The big question is what is going to drive growth forward. Real estate has become a major drag once again and the monthly data series showed activity dropping below November's lows in June. The consumption recovery should still have room to run: Households have yet to normalize their saving rate, let alone tap the excess savings built up over the pandemic. And if confidence returns, it could still unlock strong activity in H2 and beyond.
- But there is little sign of it in the latest data: we estimate retail sales fell 4% on the month, while services have been broadly flat for the past four months and surveys imply income and employment expectations will keep savings on the side-line.
- Weak growth, inflation running well below target and another rise in youth unemployment increase the chance of policy makers stepping in with a more substantial support package. Indeed, our China Financial Conditions Index (CFCI) continues to bounce around neutral.
- But a continued focus on de-risking and self-sufficiency implies stimulus will remain insufficient and piecemeal. As a result, we have trimmed our 2023 GDP forecast to 5.1% (-0.5pp).
Important information
Projections are offered as opinion and are not reflective of potential performance. Projections are not guaranteed, and actual events or results may differ materially.
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