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Factory activity shrinks across Asia, stokes global recession fears

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By Marius Zaharia
Reuters
June 3, 2019, 6:47 AM GMT+2

* Activity contracts in Japan, S.Korea, Malaysia, Taiwan

* China Caixin PMI 50.2, but official gauge 49.4

* Trade tensions flare up; global economy could face recession

* Weak economy may spark c.bank "race to the downside" on rates (Adds analysis of trade flows benefiting Vietnam)

By Marius Zaharia

HONG KONG, June 3 (Reuters) - Factory activity contracted in most Asian countries last month as an escalating trade war between Washington and Beijing raised fears of a global economic downturn and heaped pressure on policymakers in the region and beyond to roll out more stimulus.

Such growth indicators are likely to deteriorate further in coming months as higher trade tariffs take their toll on global commerce and further dent business and consumer sentiment leading to job losses and delays in investment decisions.

Some economists predict a world recession and a renewed race to the bottom on interest rates if trade tensions fail to ease at a Group of 20 summit in Osaka, Japan at the end of June, when presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping could meet.

In China, Asia's economic heartbeat, the Caixin/Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) showed modest expansion at 50.2, offering investors some near-term relief after an official gauge on Friday showed contraction.

The outlook, however, remained grim as output growth slipped, factory prices stalled and businesses were the least optimistic on production since the survey series began in April 2012.

PMIs were below the 50-point mark separating contraction from expansion in Japan, South Korea, Malaysia and Taiwan, came below expectations in Vietnam and improved slightly in the Philippines.

"The additional shock from the escalated trade tensions is not going to be good for global trade and if demand in the U.S., China and Europe continues to soften, which is very likely, it will bode ill for Asia as a whole," said Aidan Yao, senior emerging markets economist at AXA Investment Managers.

"In terms of the monetary policy response, almost everywhere the race is going to be to the downside."

Central banks in Australia and India are expected to cut rates this week, with others around the world seen following suit in coming weeks and months. HSBC economist Jingyang Chen said the PMI figures could mean "Beijing will double down on easing for the private corporate sector."

Euro zone activity is expected to shrink as well, while U.S. manufacturing is expected to grow steadily, although economists expect the global malaise to eventually feed back into the U.S. economy. Fed funds rate futures are now almost fully pricing in a rate cut by September, with about 50 percent chance of a move by July 30-31.

J.P. Morgan expects the Federal Reserve to cut rates twice this year, a major change from its previous forecast that rates will stay on hold until the end of 2020.

India, one of the world's leaders in terms of growth, will publish PMI data later on Monday. On Friday, data showed the economy growing at its slowest pace in more than four years in January-March.

The expansion in Philippines reflects strong domestic demand and less reliance on trade, while for Vietnam it is a reflection of a diversion of business and trade flows due to the tariffs.

A Societe Generale analysis shows that in industries affected by the implemented tariffs -- such as capital goods and some electronics -- Germany, Mexico, South Korea and Taiwan have each won more U.S. business.

Vietnam has been the biggest beneficiary in industries where tariffs are a threat, such as smartphones, and is also seeing investment from companies moving production out of China.

"Southeast Asian countries, especially Vietnam and Thailand, are often cited as the top choices, and indeed they look ready," Societe Generale analysts said in a Friday note.

Ominously, South Korean exports - seen as a bellwether of world growth - fell 9.4% in May, worse than a median forecast for a 5.6% decline, data released on Saturday showed.
 
CN must ban rare earth soon, so US-Jap companies that closed in CN but not move to VN will get hit hard.

Time for CN to do the right thing to the communist bloc.Lets kill those dirty capitalist wt ur rare earth .They r dying and will surely die without ur rare earth. Lets communist bloc Great again:cool:
 
CN must ban rare earth soon, so US-Jap companies that closed in CN but not move to VN will get hit hard.

Time for CN to do the right thing to the communist bloc.Lets kill those dirty capitalist wt ur rare earth .They r dying and will surely die without ur rare earth. Lets communist bloc Great again:cool:
I am hearing such threats since dinosaurs:

stop rare earth exports, stop sending tourists, stop sending students, sell out all US bonds, blockage the SC sea, imposing no-flight-zones, starting war against America, Vietnam, Taiwan, Japan, Philippines.

To be continued

Some people may feel annoyed.

By the way communist brotherhood is dead.
 
I am hearing such threats since dinosaurs:

stop rare earth exports, stop sending tourists, stop sending students, sell out all US bonds, blockage the SC sea, imposing no-flight-zones, starting war against America, Vietnam, Taiwan, Japan, Philippines.

To be continued

Some people may feel annoyed.

By the way communist brotherhood is dead.
CN will lose in trade war when she cant stop FDI companies shift from CN to other countries.

If FDI factories shift to VN, CN may still gain something cos commie VN will not let commie CN collapse so fast. If FDI shift to elsewhere, then CN will gain Nothing but a huge jobless rate.

So, CN has no choice but ban rare earth soon to make Apple-Jap factories at least shift to commie VN only ( cos commie CN will still export rare earth to commie VN) to gain something rather than gain Nothing from capitalist nations.
 

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