Thursday, August 9, 2012

NEWS,09.08.2012


China's inflation slows to 1.8% low


Chinese inflation hit a two-and-a-half-year low in July, official data showed on Thursday, giving the government further policy leeway to boost weakening growth. The country's consumer price index (CPI) rose 1.8% year-on-year (y/y) last month, the National Bureau of Statistics said, the fourth straight month of y/y easing and the lowest level since January 2010.The slowdown potentially gives authorities more ammunition to light a fire under the world's second-largest economy, which grew 7.6% in the second quarter for its worst performance since the height of the global economic crisis in 2008-2009.Authorities this year have taken measures including the rare step of slashing interest rates twice in quick succession while also lowering requirements for how much money banks must keep in reserve.Chinese leaders, including Premier Wen Jiabao, have expressed concern over the weakness in the economy and have hinted that the government may need to take further action to bolster growth.Sun Junwei, China economist at HSBC in Beijing, said the figure was in line with expectations and confirmed that inflation overall is trending downward."In general, China's inflation will likely be moderate and controllable in the future, which offers room for China to further loosen its (monetary) policy," she said.Sun added that if other economic data due out later on Thursday comes in worse than expected there could be a further cut in interest rates or bank reserve requirement ratios in August.China is scheduled to announce July figures in industrial production, fixed asset investment and retail sales later Thursday.Helping suppress the overall consumer price index was a decline of 0.9% in prices for transportation and telecommunications, according to the data.Inflation for the first seven months of 2012, meanwhile, was 3.1%, the bureau said."Inflation continues to peel off rapidly, highlighting an output gap that the government is trying to plug with rising state investment," economists at IHS Global Insight said in a report after the release of the July data.Producer price inflation (PPI), a leading indicator, declined 2.9% in July from the same month last year for the fifth straight month of contraction.Producer prices "continue to highlight the severe deflationary pressure rippling across the country", IHS Global Insight said, noting that "deflation, not inflation, is the greatest short-term threat to the Chinese economy".



Eurozone GDP to fall by 0.3% this year


The eurozone economy will contract by 0.3% in 2012 before recovering more slowly than expected next year to expand by 0.6%, a poll conducted by the European Central Bank (ECB) revealed on Thursday. The data came from the Survey of Professional Forecasters which the ECB carries out on a quarterly basis. It was published in the Frankfurt-based bank's monthly bulletin.The previous SPF survey predicted a 0.2% contraction for eurozone gross domestic product (GDP) this year and a 1% expansion in 2013.Recession-inducing austerity measures in some euro countries and "higher uncertainty" over the resolution of the single currency's debt crisis were "the main factors behind the downward revisions," the ECB said.Forecasters also said that eurozone unemployment would stay at its current high of 11.2% throughout 2012 and increase to 11.4% in 2013. Inflation was projected to fall from 2.3% to 1.7% over the same period.The ECB said it expected "weak" economic activity both in the second and third quarter of 2012 and only a "very" gradual recovery afterwards. "Risks surrounding the economic outlook for the euro area continue to be on the downside," it noted.The European Union statistical office, Eurostat, is to publish GDP figures for the second quarter of the year on Tuesday.



India's shock fall in industrial output



India's industrial production contracted by a shock 1.8% from a year earlier in June, as manufacturing output shrank in Asia's third-largest economy, official figures showed on Thursday, The data underscored the massive job ahead for India's new pro-market finance minister, P. Chidamabaram, who pledged this week to "restart the growth engine" of India's sharply slowing economy.Manufacturing output, which accounts for three-quarters of the index of industrial production, fell 3.2% from a year earlier in June, according to the government data.Manufacturing has been undermined by high interest rates to combat stubbornly high inflation, falling business confidence and Europe's debt crisis which has hit exports.The 1.8% shrinkage in output by factories, mines and utilities in June was the third contraction in four months and followed a revised 2.5% production rise in May.The industrial output reading was far below analysts' expectations, which were for an increase of 0.80%, according to a Dow Jones Newswires poll.The weak performance is likely to pile pressure on the central bank to ease interest rates to spur growth.The bank has said it wants inflation to come down before cutting borrowing costs, but Chidambaram has already indicated he wants lower rates, saying "sometimes it is necessary to take carefully calibrated risks".The weak numbers come as the left-leaning Congress-led government is under pressure over a string of graft scandals and its attempts to liberalise the still inward-looking economy to spur growth have led to gridlock in parliament.India's once-booming economy grew just 5.3% between January and March, its slowest annual quarterly expansion in nine years.Capital goods output, an important investment indicator, slid 27.9% in June from a year earlier.Goldman Sachs economist Tushar Poddar, who recently pared his full fiscal year growth forecast to 5.7% in contrast to the central bank's expectation of 6.5% expansion, saw more tough times ahead."Weak monsoons are also likely to impact rural consumption demand and exacerbate weakness in investment demand," Poddar said ahead of the data.Citibank has said if a nationwide drought is declared, which would be the country's third in a decade, growth could be as low as 4.9% as hundreds of millions of farmers depend on the annual rains for their income.

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