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China's services gauge extends growth streak, bucking slowdown

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 3 min read
China's services gauge extends growth streak, bucking slowdown
The RatingDog China services purchasing managers index (PMI) slipped to 52.6 from 52.9 in September, according to a statement published on Wednesday.
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(Nov 5): China’s services activity expanded in October even though growth was the weakest in three months, a private survey showed, as holiday spending and travel by households insulated the industry from a deepening economic slowdown.

The RatingDog China services purchasing managers index (PMI) slipped to 52.6 from 52.9 in September, according to a statement published on Wednesday, extending a growth streak that started after Covid lockdowns in 2022. The median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg was 52.5, with any reading above 50 indicating an expansion.

The reading adds to a picture of an industry that’s holding up relatively well despite sluggish consumer demand, even as weakness spreads across the world’s second-biggest economy. Official PMIs last week showed the services activity picked up slightly to start the fourth quarter, thanks largely to long autumn holidays and the beginning of a shopping festival in October, while manufacturing and construction both slumped.

“A solid improvement in domestic demand continued to drive the expansion of new orders,” Yao Yu, the founder of RatingDog, said in the statement. “The sustained contraction in employment and pressure on profit margins remain the main constraints facing the sector.”

China will likely have to lean more on the strength of domestic spending in the months ahead, even after a deal reached last week between US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, to defuse trade tensions.

See also: China launches import promotions to address imbalance concerns

As export front-loading wanes and investment slows sharply, services consumption has emerged as a key area of focus for officials because it holds out the potential of unlocking additional demand — especially in areas like tourism and entertainment that don’t fully meet household needs.

In September, the government laid out measures to use its budget to develop the necessary infrastructure and guide banks to lend more to services providers along with consumers.

And last month, policymakers pledged to increase expenditure on public services and work on promoting employment, according to a guiding document on China’s next five-year plan starting in 2026.

See also: After China’s long retail downturn, CEOs see consumer spending coming back

The programme, however, also doubles down on industrial dominance and tech self-sufficiency, leading JPMorgan Chase & Co economists to write that development of the services sector will likely remain secondary to manufacturing.

While the Chinese economy has entered the last quarter of the year with weaker momentum, strong performance earlier in the year means that a growth target of around 5% is likely within reach.

Still, many analysts predict gross domestic product will be expanding only close to 4% in the coming quarters, in what would be some of the slowest growth seen since zero-Covid lockdowns roiled production in 2022.

Uploaded by Tham Yek Lee

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