Hopes for Chinese reflation
China's producer prices surged at the fastest pace since 2008, further lifting the outlook for global reflation as manufacturers in the exporter to the world look to pass on higher costs.
Producer price index rose 7.8% last month from a year earlier, compared with median estimate of 7.7% in a Bloomberg survey and a 6.9% in January Factory prices only swung out of four-and-a-half years of deflation in September. Consumer price index rose 0.8% versus 1.7% increase forecast by analysts, as timing of Lunar New Year holidays skewed the reading.
China is lifting the global price outlook as producer inflation climbs and a pick-up in demand fuels commodity prices. Still, economists see such forces moderating as year-earlier comparisons begin to rise and policy curbs restrain the property market.
The CPI data was distorted by the week-long Chinese New Year holiday, which started in February last year, driving up food prices as families prepared for gatherings, whereas it fell in late January this year, when CPI climbed to a two-and-a-half year high of 2.5%.
It's a “strange reflation of the Chinese economy,” said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Natixis SA in Hong Kong. It helps “corporations by allowing them to push up prices and generate the needed revenues to cover their very high debt burden.”
“Everything has peaked in the first quarter - nominal GDP growth, corporate earnings, PPI inflation,” said Larry Hu, head of China economics at Macquarie Securities in Hong Kong. “The strong numbers we are seeing now are not sustainable.”
“This reflects robust demand, higher commodity prices, and a weaker yuan,” Fielding Chen, an economist at Bloomberg Intelligence in Hong Kong, said in a note.
“More-recent moves in oil and iron ore prices suggest some cooling ahead. But the reflation trend points to higher corporate profits and lower real borrowing costs - both positive for China's economy.”
“We expect CPI inflation to remain tamed in the near term, while PPI may stay elevated,” Eva Yi, an economist at China International Capital in Hong Kong, wrote in a report.
“We do not expect a fast decline of PPI after February, nor do we believe February PPI is necessarily the high-point for this round of PPI reflation. Higher PPI signifies recovering investment and export demand and notable improvement in industrial profitability.”
Producer prices for mining and raw materials surged and consumer prices of food fell 4.3% from a year earlier. The slowdown in CPI was due to falling food prices, fewer tourists and cheaper accommodation after the Chinese New Year holiday, the NBS said in a statement.
BLOOMBERG
Producer price index rose 7.8% last month from a year earlier, compared with median estimate of 7.7% in a Bloomberg survey and a 6.9% in January Factory prices only swung out of four-and-a-half years of deflation in September. Consumer price index rose 0.8% versus 1.7% increase forecast by analysts, as timing of Lunar New Year holidays skewed the reading.
China is lifting the global price outlook as producer inflation climbs and a pick-up in demand fuels commodity prices. Still, economists see such forces moderating as year-earlier comparisons begin to rise and policy curbs restrain the property market.
The CPI data was distorted by the week-long Chinese New Year holiday, which started in February last year, driving up food prices as families prepared for gatherings, whereas it fell in late January this year, when CPI climbed to a two-and-a-half year high of 2.5%.
It's a “strange reflation of the Chinese economy,” said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Natixis SA in Hong Kong. It helps “corporations by allowing them to push up prices and generate the needed revenues to cover their very high debt burden.”
“Everything has peaked in the first quarter - nominal GDP growth, corporate earnings, PPI inflation,” said Larry Hu, head of China economics at Macquarie Securities in Hong Kong. “The strong numbers we are seeing now are not sustainable.”
“This reflects robust demand, higher commodity prices, and a weaker yuan,” Fielding Chen, an economist at Bloomberg Intelligence in Hong Kong, said in a note.
“More-recent moves in oil and iron ore prices suggest some cooling ahead. But the reflation trend points to higher corporate profits and lower real borrowing costs - both positive for China's economy.”
“We expect CPI inflation to remain tamed in the near term, while PPI may stay elevated,” Eva Yi, an economist at China International Capital in Hong Kong, wrote in a report.
“We do not expect a fast decline of PPI after February, nor do we believe February PPI is necessarily the high-point for this round of PPI reflation. Higher PPI signifies recovering investment and export demand and notable improvement in industrial profitability.”
Producer prices for mining and raw materials surged and consumer prices of food fell 4.3% from a year earlier. The slowdown in CPI was due to falling food prices, fewer tourists and cheaper accommodation after the Chinese New Year holiday, the NBS said in a statement.
BLOOMBERG
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