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China Economy: industrial output up 5.9%, retail sales up 8.6%, fixed-asset investment up 5.7%

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China's industrial output up 5.9 pct in October

Xinhua Published: 2018-11-14 10:32:22

China's value-added industrial output, an important economic indicator, expanded 5.9 percent year on year in October, the National Bureau of Statistics said Wednesday.

17ec1c53-71bc-46e4-bcdc-e5a3a249f50d.jpg


A worker paints equipment at a factory in Huaibei City, Anhui Province. [File Photo: IC]

The growth rate was 0.1 percentage point faster than that recorded in September.

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China's retail sales up 8.6 pct in October

Xinhua Published: 2018-11-14 10:39:32


China's retail sales of consumer goods grew 8.6 percent year on year in October, data showed Wednesday.

The growth slowed in comparison with the 9.2-percent rise in September, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

38bf49e6-c76f-4c4a-8353-21c30d7da20f.jpg


Consumers select goods at a supermarket in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province on August 18, 2018. [File photo: IC]

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China's fixed-asset investment up 5.7 pct in first 10 months

Xinhua Published: 2018-11-14 10:37:56


China's fixed-asset investment rose 5.7 percent in the first 10 months of the year, accelerating from 5.4 percent for Jan.-Sept. period, data showed Wednesday.

7e834665-aabf-411c-a3f4-178ffb5fd61c.jpg


Undated photo shows fixed-assets in a factory in China's Shandong Province. [Photo: IC]

http://chinaplus.cri.cn/news/business/12/20181114/209502.html
 
China's industrial output up 5.9 pct in October

Xinhua Published: 2018-11-14 10:32:22

China's value-added industrial output, an important economic indicator, expanded 5.9 percent year on year in October, the National Bureau of Statistics said Wednesday.

17ec1c53-71bc-46e4-bcdc-e5a3a249f50d.jpg


A worker paints equipment at a factory in Huaibei City, Anhui Province. [File Photo: IC]

The growth rate was 0.1 percentage point faster than that recorded in September.

*

China's retail sales up 8.6 pct in October

Xinhua Published: 2018-11-14 10:39:32


China's retail sales of consumer goods grew 8.6 percent year on year in October, data showed Wednesday.

The growth slowed in comparison with the 9.2-percent rise in September, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

38bf49e6-c76f-4c4a-8353-21c30d7da20f.jpg


Consumers select goods at a supermarket in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province on August 18, 2018. [File photo: IC]

*

China's fixed-asset investment up 5.7 pct in first 10 months

Xinhua Published: 2018-11-14 10:37:56


China's fixed-asset investment rose 5.7 percent in the first 10 months of the year, accelerating from 5.4 percent for Jan.-Sept. period, data showed Wednesday.

7e834665-aabf-411c-a3f4-178ffb5fd61c.jpg


Undated photo shows fixed-assets in a factory in China's Shandong Province. [Photo: IC]

http://chinaplus.cri.cn/news/business/12/20181114/209502.html

great china .
 
China's industrial output up 5.9 pct in October

Xinhua Published: 2018-11-14 10:32:22

China's value-added industrial output, an important economic indicator, expanded 5.9 percent year on year in October, the National Bureau of Statistics said Wednesday.

17ec1c53-71bc-46e4-bcdc-e5a3a249f50d.jpg


A worker paints equipment at a factory in Huaibei City, Anhui Province. [File Photo: IC]

The growth rate was 0.1 percentage point faster than that recorded in September.

*

China's retail sales up 8.6 pct in October

Xinhua Published: 2018-11-14 10:39:32


China's retail sales of consumer goods grew 8.6 percent year on year in October, data showed Wednesday.

The growth slowed in comparison with the 9.2-percent rise in September, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

38bf49e6-c76f-4c4a-8353-21c30d7da20f.jpg


Consumers select goods at a supermarket in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province on August 18, 2018. [File photo: IC]

*

China's fixed-asset investment up 5.7 pct in first 10 months

Xinhua Published: 2018-11-14 10:37:56


China's fixed-asset investment rose 5.7 percent in the first 10 months of the year, accelerating from 5.4 percent for Jan.-Sept. period, data showed Wednesday.

7e834665-aabf-411c-a3f4-178ffb5fd61c.jpg


Undated photo shows fixed-assets in a factory in China's Shandong Province. [Photo: IC]

http://chinaplus.cri.cn/news/business/12/20181114/209502.html
But western media will use PMI change from 51.7 to 51.5 as their fake China collapsing article.
:lol:
 
For the last few months, I noticed a surge of articles in Bloomberg.com mainly emphasised on failure and doom of China after Trump imposed tariffs, including one on predicting Nov 11th Alibaba sales will be a disappointing event for Jack Ma.

After the record sales of Alibaba Nov 11th sales, and the talk of a fresh rounds of trade negotiation between China and US, these articles suddenly disappeared from their web site. This is a gross evidence of US government and their proxies using Bloomberg as their spinning tool to make China look bad. The credibility of Bloomberg has sunk low in muddy ground.

China has shown that they don't need USA, there are alternative import and export markets, as well as a growing domestic goods and service market, China shall prevails over the narrow minded and bully minded Trump administration.
 
But western media will use PMI change from 51.7 to 51.5 as their fake China collapsing article.
:lol:

In their mind, I think, numbers should never change. Or, if they change, they should keep growing.

Yet, when it is their regime, they find pretty words. So, they call money printing or borrowing as quantitative easing or expansion.

:partay:

This is a gross evidence of US government and their proxies using Bloomberg as their spinning tool to make China look bad. The credibility of Bloomberg has sunk low in muddy ground.

I guess East Asia has a very good experience of Western media acting as economic frontal attack forces of their regime when they experienced the Asian Financial Crisis.

If the fundamentals are weak or economic sovereignty is imperfect, then, these media attacks can in fact make a dent on the target country, creating panic and economic turmoil.

Yet, now, most East Asian countries and economies strongly oversight their financials and keep capital movement under strict control.
 
china stock market tanking because china economy is weak. the US stock market tanking is because of their economy is so stronk.. lol :D

Why is the U.S. stock market weak? Because the economy is too strong
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/w...-because-the-economy-is-too-strong-2018-11-14

But the economy is not strong. Its debt fueled spending at all levels. We have more retirees per worker than ever before, record debt, aging population with huge and growing health care costs, rising costs of dealing with climate change. Just giving people and corporations deficit tax cuts and pretending spending this borrowed money is a booming economy is utter nonsense.
 
china stock market tanking because china economy is weak. the US stock market tanking is because of their economy is so stronk.. lol :D

Why is the U.S. stock market weak? Because the economy is too strong
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/w...-because-the-economy-is-too-strong-2018-11-14
Currently there is a capital flight to the US markets from emerging markets and even developed markets, high interest rates from the FED only exacerbates this.

Overly high or low exchange rates aren't good for different reasons, there is no high or low on an absolute level, it is relative to market forces. Overly high exchange rates hurt export industries like what was imposed on Japan under the Plaza Accord. Low exchange rates are good for preserving export industries but will make imports more expensive. It is easier to bear if a nation has a relatively complete supply chain, in some substitutable industries it would be good for local business.

It isn't smart for China to have an overly high exchange rate. Its priority is the build up of increasingly higher tier industries, not yet ready for financialization of the economy.

The stock market has a lot to do with debt cycles. Debt creates money in the system and inflates asset prices, including the stock market. Once deleveraging occurs, money becomes tighter and stock market contracts (depends on where money goes). Productivity grows more consistently in the background while market fluctuates.

For an industrially focused nation, productivity growth is much more important and is what differentiates high income nations from those stuck in middle income. Those stuck in the middle income trap were lured in by the easy money of the virtual economy, while neglecting the long term growth factors towards productivity. They maintained a certain technology level thinking growth will continue, this can only go so far, what growth occurred was virtual. Real growth comes from the development of a country's productivity which comes from improving technology, knowledge base and management. Productivity is supported by long term policies and actions. To look at a nation's long term prospects, look at their R&D, technology improvements, ability to spread knowledge/skills, improvements in management, industrial policies and even culture.

A nation's industries that can plan and execute its plan for 20 years or more isn't necessarily able to produce a competitive turbofan engine, but a nation's industries that cannot plan and execute its plan for 20 years or more definitely cannot produce a competitive turbofan engine. The higher in value your foundation industries move, the more stability, capital and long term planning is necessary. For me a large country's competitiveness comes from its ability to maintain and develop its foundational and strategic industries. The rest are excesses of the foundation that people can enjoy, without a strong foundation any excesses are unsustainable. This is where culture comes in, some cultures are unwilling to tighten their belts for long term development, they much prefer short term pleasure and have long term pain than take short term pain.
 
china stock market tanking because china economy is weak. the US stock market tanking is because of their economy is so stronk.. lol :D

Why is the U.S. stock market weak? Because the economy is too strong
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/w...-because-the-economy-is-too-strong-2018-11-14

I love the spin. I guess they receive PhD in spin job.

Quote:

"But the economy is not strong. Its debt fueled spending at all levels. We have more retirees per worker than ever before, record debt, aging population with huge and growing health care costs, rising costs of dealing with climate change. Just giving people and corporations deficit tax cuts and pretending spending this borrowed money is a booming economy is utter nonsense." (End Quote)

Of course, they never mention the bloated military for their economic pains :lol:
 
Currently there is a capital flight to the US markets from emerging markets and even developed markets, high interest rates from the FED only exacerbates this.

Overly high or low exchange rates aren't good for different reasons, there is no high or low on an absolute level, it is relative to market forces. Overly high exchange rates hurt export industries like what was imposed on Japan under the Plaza Accord. Low exchange rates are good for preserving export industries but will make imports more expensive. It is easier to bear if a nation has a relatively complete supply chain, in some substitutable industries it would be good for local business.

It isn't smart for China to have an overly high exchange rate. Its priority is the build up of increasingly higher tier industries, not yet ready for financialization of the economy.

The stock market has a lot to do with debt cycles. Debt creates money in the system and inflates asset prices, including the stock market. Once deleveraging occurs, money becomes tighter and stock market contracts (depends on where money goes). Productivity grows more consistently in the background while market fluctuates.

For an industrially focused nation, productivity growth is much more important and is what differentiates high income nations from those stuck in middle income. Those stuck in the middle income trap were lured in by the easy money of the virtual economy, while neglecting the long term growth factors towards productivity. They maintained a certain technology level thinking growth will continue, this can only go so far, what growth occurred was virtual. Real growth comes from the development of a country's productivity which comes from improving technology, knowledge base and management. Productivity is supported by long term policies and actions. To look at a nation's long term prospects, look at their R&D, technology improvements, ability to spread knowledge/skills, improvements in management, industrial policies and even culture.

A nation's industries that can plan and execute its plan for 20 years or more isn't necessarily able to produce a competitive turbofan engine, but a nation's industries that cannot plan and execute its plan for 20 years or more definitely cannot produce a competitive turbofan engine. The higher in value your foundation industries move, the more stability, capital and long term planning is necessary. For me a large country's competitiveness comes from its ability to maintain and develop its foundational and strategic industries. The rest are excesses of the foundation that people can enjoy, without a strong foundation any excesses are unsustainable. This is where culture comes in, some cultures are unwilling to tighten their belts for long term development, they much prefer short term pleasure and have long term pain than take short term pain.
The thing is most Chinese companies do not rely on stock markets to attract investment.
Stock market in China is just a game, not really worth digging if one wants to know Chinese economy's real situation.
 
In their mind, I think, numbers should never change. Or, if they change, they should keep growing.

Yet, when it is their regime, they find pretty words. So, they call money printing or borrowing as quantitative easing or expansion.

Chinese can learn a thing or three when it comes to spinning. I find Chinese people from all walks of life are bad at using positive words to describe bad situation. Academias are the worst.
 
Chinese can learn a thing or three when it comes to spinning. I find Chinese people from all walks of life are bad at using positive words to describe bad situation. Academias are the worst.

Exactly. That's I agree 100%. We still in the learning process of how to create, manage, shape and manipulate discourses (words, concepts, terms) to promote, protect and reinforce our own national interests.

Sovereign developing countries all suffer from this discourse deficit.

Of course, unfree countries like Japan do not have such problem. As they are subjugated, Western discourse machine does not hit them. So, they feel cute and cuddly.
 
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China's retail sales up 8.6 pct in October

Xinhua Published: 2018-11-14 10:39:32


China's retail sales of consumer goods grew 8.6 percent year on year in October, data showed Wednesday.

The growth slowed in comparison with the 9.2-percent rise in September, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

38bf49e6-c76f-4c4a-8353-21c30d7da20f.jpg


Consumers select goods at a supermarket in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province on August 18, 2018. [File photo: IC]

*

China's fixed-asset investment up 5.7 pct in first 10 months

Xinhua Published: 2018-11-14 10:37:56


China's fixed-asset investment rose 5.7 percent in the first 10 months of the year, accelerating from 5.4 percent for Jan.-Sept. period, data showed Wednesday.

7e834665-aabf-411c-a3f4-178ffb5fd61c.jpg


Undated photo shows fixed-assets in a factory in China's Shandong Province. [Photo: IC]

http://chinaplus.cri.cn/news/business/12/20181114/209502.html

Chinese consumers aren't spending as much. Many are worried about the future
  • While analysts say Chinese consumers are generally financially healthy, many are holding off on spending due to uncertainty about the future.
  • "There's an anxiety the economy going forward may not do as well," Daniel Zipser, senior partner at McKinsey, said in a phone interview Tuesday. "The person still has the money to buy a new car but will wait."
  • Consumers are also taking advantage of rapid developments in Chinese financial technology, or fintech, that allow for spending on credit or purchasing on installment.
Evelyn Cheng | @chengevelyn
Published 23 Hours Ago Updated 22 Hours AgoCNBC.com

Visual China Group | Getty Images
A customer shows his iPhone XS Max during the launch of iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max at an Apple store on the Nanjing East Road on September 21, 2018 in Shanghai, China.
China's massive consumer base is feeling a chill that could have ripple effects throughout an economy that's already under pressure.

While analysts say individuals are generally financially healthy, many are holding off on spending due to uncertainty about the future.

"A decline in consumption is the biggest risk, because everyone already knows about the decline in investment, everyone also knows about the trade tensions," said Jian Guang Shen, chief economist at JD Digits, which was spun off from Chinese e-commerce company JD.com. He used to be the chief economist at Mizuho Securities Asia.


"Everyone's confidence, confidence in this year's situation, has declined, (and) consumption was immediately impacted," Shen said in Mandarin on Tuesday, according to a CNBC translation. "In the next couple of months, consumption will continue to slow."

Already, retail sales fell to a disappointing 8.6 percent in October. That contrasts with past years which generally saw near-10 percent growth or higher.

"There's an anxiety the economy going forward may not do as well."-Daniel Zipser, senior partner at McKinsey
Auto sales in the world's largest market for cars have fallen more than 11.5 percent in the last two months, turning year-to-date growth negative for the first time in more than six years, according to official figures available in the Wind Info database.

"There's an anxiety the economy going forward may not do as well," Daniel Zipser, senior partner at consultancy firm McKinsey, said in a phone interview Tuesday. "The person still has the money to buy a new car but will wait."

Economic challenges
China's economy slowed this year amid the government's efforts to reduce reliance on debt-fueled growth, making it more difficult for businesses to obtain financing. Increasing tensions with the U.S., China's largest trade partner, have added to uncertainty.

A weakening currency and slumping stocks — the Shanghai and Shenzhen composite are among the world's worst performers this year — haven't helped shore up confidence.

Many Chinese consumers have been hit by peer-to-peer lending scams, in which platforms purporting to connect individual investors with borrowers ended up running away with the money. An increasing number of Chinese also now bear the burden of home mortgages. According to McKinsey's Zipser, household debt stands at more than 100 percent of annual income in China — higher than the U.S.

But such pressures haven't stopped Chinese from spending entirely. China's 8.6 percent growth in retail sales is still well above the United States' 4.6 percent year-on-year increase in October.

Analysts also noted Chinese are spending more on travel, healthcare and dining out, and increasingly enjoy new sales tactics that incorporate augmented reality and facial recognition. The trend is also helping brick-and-mortar retailers who are offline.



Is China's growth story over? 9:16 AM ET Thu, 13 Sept 2018 | 04:49

Thirty-seven percent of new openings in Beijing shopping malls in the last 12 months were in food and beverage, helped by a growth in cafes, according to Linda Yu, research manager for commercial real estate company JLL. She added that sportswear and home accessories store openings were also seeing significant growth.

"We think the Chinese consumer is generally healthy," Yu said. "It's not so much about showing what you have. People are really interested in living well."

Risks down the road
Consumers are also taking advantage of rapid developments in Chinese financial technology, or fintech, that allow for spending on credit or purchasing on installment. While analysts say the overall amount remains low, the trend bears watching for risks down the road.

"The lending market has given the consumers access to purchase expensive products such as the new iPhone X, which they may not be able to afford," Felix Yang, a Shanghai-based analyst at financial services consulting and research firm Kapronasia, said in an email last week.

Younger consumers are behind the trend.

Installment purchase platform Fenqile said the number of its Nov. 11 Singles' Day customers doubled, with the post-1995 generation accounting for more than 60 percent of the total sales that day. While parent LexinFintech doesn't break out the number of Fenqile users, the Nasdaq-listed company said the number of its registered users reached 32.6 million at the end of September.

Alibaba-affiliate Ant Financial also lets customers purchase on credit through its Huabei platform. Figures on how consumers utilized Huabei during Singles' Day weren't available, but Yang noted credit limits were increased during the shopping holiday to encourage spending.

Despite concerns, fintech companies argue they wouldn't be running lending businesses if customers weren't able to pay. Fenqile said nearly half of the customers it acquired in the first quarter of 2015 were still active users more than three years later.

Credit concerns
"Consumer finance plays a more and more important role in the market than five years ago," Sherri He, Shanghai-based partner at consulting firm A.T. Kearney, said in a phone interview earlier this week. She added that online retailers offering consumer financing have seen an increase in purchases.

The level of credit use is not really beyond that of the U.S. and still in early stages of development, she said. "If the Chinese economy is going to be stable, overall consumption will be no problem."

However, it may prove to be a vicious cycle. China's growth is increasingly reliant on consumption. It now contributes to well over two-thirds of annual GDP growth, according to official data. In the last several months, the government raised the amount of income exempt from taxes, while trying to increase enforcement of contributions to social security.

Beijing also tried to boost confidence in the stock market and economy by announcing stimulus, supporting stock purchase plans and trying to improve borrowing conditions for businesses.

It's not clear yet whether such policy changes can help the Chinese consumer feel more confident about spending in a big way. In the meantime, purchasing trends may point to a greater challenge of income inequality.

"I think what's most significant in China right now is stratification," Shen said. "Consumption is increasingly stratified."

https://www.cnbc.com/2018/11/22/chinese-consumers-arent-spending-as-much-because-theyre-worried.html
 
New economy output accounts for 15.7 pct of China's GDP
Xinhua, November 22, 2018

The value-added output of new industries, new types of business and new business models accounted for 15.7 percent of China's GDP last year, up 0.4 percentage points from 2016, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said Thursday.

It was the first time the NBS officially released data on the value-added output of the new economy.

In current prices, new economic output grew 14.1 percent in 2017, outpacing the GDP growth in current prices by 2.9 percentage points, according to the NBS.

The output of new industries, business types, and models in the service sector accounted for 8.4 percent of the country's GDP last year, up 0.4 percentage points from 2016 and higher than that in the agricultural and industrial sectors.

New economic output in the service sector expanded 17 percent in current prices in 2017, NBS data showed.

New industries and business forms have become a greater driving force for the Chinese economy amid technology development, market upgrading and government efforts to boost mass entrepreneurship and innovation.

http://www.china.org.cn/business/2018-11/22/content_74199049.htm
 

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