China’s factory deflation deepened in September due to slowing output
growth and falling raw material prices, adding to signs that China’s domestic slowdown is an increasing drag on the struggling world economy.
The producer price index fell 1.2 percent from a year earlier, as forecast by economists in a Bloomberg survey. Surging pork prices drove consumer inflation higher, cutting into household spending power.
China’s producer price deflation is acting as a brake on the global price outlook just as central banks step up easing in an attempt to put a floor under slowing world expansion. Weak import data reported on Monday had already added to the gloom over the global outlook, which is worsening amid the uncertainty caused by the US-China dispute.
“Growth momentum is definitely weak as indicated by the persistently declining PPI,” said Raymond Yeung, chief Greater China economist at Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Hong Kong. “The industrial recession is not only caused by the trade war but also a lack of domestic drivers.”
The consumer price index rose 3 percent year-on-year, the fastest since 2013. That was driven by food prices climbing 11.2 percent and the more than 69-percent jump in pork prices, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. Consumer inflation excluding food and energy remained stable at 1.5 percent.
China’s economy is facing rising downward pressures and economic difficulties are prominent, Premier Li Keqiang said in a meeting with local government leaders, according to state television broadcaster CCTV on Monday. The proper use of counter-cyclical tools is needed to support growth, Li said, as he called for expanding effective investment and seeking new areas of consumption growth.
Chinese policy-makers are facing a rising
divergence in inflation, with surging food prices pushing up what consumers
pay, while deflation has returned to the industrial sector, hurting profits and
making debt repayment more difficult. The PBOC has increased liquidity supply
to banks but has refrained from cutting benchmark
interest rates so far.
Credit data due this week will show if the recent stimulus is actually helping boost lending, while data due Friday is forecast to show economic growth continued to slow in the third quarter. With CPI rising 3 percent, a tentative trade war truce agreed Friday, and policy-makers’ desire to curb debt and financial risks, there may be only a “measured dose” of stimulus, according to Michelle Lam, greater China economist at Societe Generale SA in Hong Kong.
Swine fever
Given the spread of African swine fever, a sharper contraction in hog stock and pork production, and limited room to increase hog and pork supply, pork prices will trend higher in coming quarters, said Lu Ting, chief China economist at Nomura International Ltd. in Hong Kong.
That fever and subsequent slaughter of millions of pigs has pushed up prices, but breeders are unlikely to rush to restock their herds in a meaningful way over fears of catching the disease again, Feng Yonghui, chief analyst with industry portal www.soozhu.com, said at a conference last month. Many farmers are waiting for a vaccine to be developed, Feng said, and the costs of both breeding sows and piglets have surged to record highs, making it more expensive to restock.
Investment drag
The return to PPI deflation since July is not only acting as a drag on manufacturing investment, already under stress from US-China trade tensions and supply-chain relocation, but also poses a major risk for onshore corporate debt refinancing, Bo Zhuang, chief China economist at research firm TS Lombard, said before the inflation data. Sustained PPI deflation, where the monthly rate remained below -2 percent for more than three to six months, would be a likely catalyst for the reversion to old-style credit stimulus, he said.
The CPI will stay above 3 percent in coming months, and could rise to close to 4 percent in January when the Lunar New Year holiday falls, according to Nomura’s Lu. Producer price inflation may fall even more due to weakening domestic demand, falling energy and raw material prices and the value-added tax cut that became effective in April this year, he said.