There was a slight improvement in China’s May NBS PMIs with the composite rising 0.2 points to 50.4, holding above the breakeven 50-mark. JP Morgan believes that there should be some “easing” in “near-term external pressure”. It’s “baseline scenario assumes China’s growth to moderate to an average 3%q/q saar pace through the rest of the year, with full-year 2025 GDP growth at 4.8%yoy.”
- JP Morgan sees “the main challenges to the Chinese economy coming from structural imbalance between production, consumption and investment, and deflation pressure, calling for ongoing growth-support measures.”
- “The manufacturing PMI recovered 0.5-pt to 49.5 upon US-China tariff de-escalation, though non-manufacturing PMI fell modestly by 0.1-pt to a 50.3 (four-month low). In all, the composite PMI rose 0.2-pt to 50.4.”
- “The export orders component of the manufacturing PMI recovered by 2.8-pt to 47.5 upon tariff de-escalation, as surveyed corporates reported a notable rebound in export demand from the US market. The new orders and output components also ticked up in May.”
- “The future output component recovered moderately in May, suggesting moderate improvement in manufacturers’ sentiment amid tariff de-escalation and easing of near-term external pressure.”
- “While there have been growing concerns that escalating tariff risks could hit employment notably, it is encouraging to note that labor market conditions seem to have stabilized somewhat amid a near-term improvement in export sector sentiment.”
- “The pricing components of the manufacturing PMI eased further in May, suggesting lingering deflation pressure.”
- “The service activity index edged up 0.1-pt to a still subdued level of 50.2, with major drags from the real estate service sector and financial services.”