China’s recovery fails to lift factory demand
John E. Kaye

During May, Asia’s factory decline deepened as the slump in global trade caused by the coronavirus pandemic worsened, with export powerhouses Japan and South Korea suffering the sharpest declines in business activity in more than a decade.
A sequence of manufacturing surveys released early Monday proposed that any rebound in businesses will be sometimes off, even though China’s factory activity unexpectedly returned to growth in May.
China’s Caixin/Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) hit 50.7 last month, marking the highest reading since January as easing of lockdowns allowed companies to get back to work and clear pending and outstanding orders.
However, with many of China’s trading partners still restricted, its new export orders remained in contraction, the private business survey showed on Monday. China’s official PMI survey on Sunday showed the recovery in the world’s second-largest economy intact but fragile.
Japan’s factory activity shrank at the fastest pace since 2009 in May, a separate private sector survey showed. While in South Korea, manufacturing slump at the sharpest pace in more than a decade.
Official data on Monday showed South Korea extending its exports plunge for a third straight month.
Capital Economics said the region’s manufacturing sector is in deep recession.
“Industry is likely to have seen an initial jump from the easing of lockdown restrictions. And things are likely to continue improving very gradually over the coming months as external demand recovers,” Capital Economics wrote. “But output is still likely to be well below normal levels for many months to come as domestic and global demand remain very depressed.”
Taiwan’s manufacturing activity also fell in May. Vietnam, Malaysia and the Philippines saw PMIs rebound from April, though the indices all remained below the 50-mark threshold that separates contraction from expansion.
India’s factory activity contracted sharply in May, extending the major decline seen in April as a government-imposed lockdown hammered demand.
Asia’s economic woes are likely to be echoed in other parts of the world including Europe, where economies continue to suffer huge damage in factory and service sectors.
With many countries starting to ease lockdown restrictions imposed to stop the spread of the virus, which has infected over 5.5 million people globally, equity markets are rallying on hopes for a swift return to health and prosperity.
But the trough in global economic activity will be deeper and the rebound is likely to take longer than previously predicted as the pandemic spreads in waves.
The International Monetary Fund warned last month the global economy will take much longer than expected to recover fully from the virus shock, suggesting a downgrade to its current projection for a 3% contraction this year.
A U.S.-China spat over Hong Kong’s status and Beijing’s handling of the pandemic could sour business sentiment and add to already huge strains on the global economy.
The final au Jibun Bank Japan Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to a seasonally adjusted 38.4 from 41.9 in April, its lowest since March 2009.
South Korea’s IHS Markit purchasing managers’ index (PMI) edged down to 41.3 in May, the lowest since January 2009 and below 41.6 in April.
Reported by Leika Kihara
For more Daily news follow The European Magazine
TOP STORIES
-
BOC Macau strengthens role as China finance bridge after six award wins -
Top British chefs warn restaurants are fighting for survival as closures hit three-a-day -
Claude maker Anthropic valued at nearly $1tn after record AI funding round -
Felled Sycamore Gap tree ‘to speak again’ in UK national memorial -
NASA to send rabbit-like drones to scout site for first Moon base -
Apollo, Artemis, Ali and Live Aid satellite station set for new Moon role in £37m deal -
BrewDog founder pours free shares into new beer firm -
Inside gaming billionaire Gabe Newell’s next-level gigayacht -
Machiavell-AI? Autonomous artificial intelligence systems ‘could become dangerously manipulative’, experts warn -
Prague targets high-value business travellers after global congress ranking boost -
eBay rejects GameStop bid -
AI EVERYTHING KENYA X GITEX KENYA summit launches in Nairobi as East Africa accelerates AI ambitions -
Xpeng eyes European factory as VW seeks to offload spare capacity -
This hidden Greek beach has just been named the best in Europe -
Siemens expands rail technology arm with Italian deal -
New routes put Europe’s rail revival back on track -
Parked electric cars could help power island ferries in German trial -
UK billionaire count falls as wealthy quit Britain, Sunday Times Rich List shows -
Macron unveils £20bn Africa push as France strikes new Kenya deals -
Italy draws global tech investors as Europe races to build its own champions -
Opel turns to Chinese EV technology for new European-built SUV -
Japan and Luxembourg deepen space ties as lunar race gathers pace -
Meet the Earth Prize-winning teenager tackling the world’s microplastic crisis -
Starmer fights for future as he moves to nationalise British Steel -
Bluebird returns to Coniston 59 years after Campbell’s fatal crash



























