Posted: 02 May 2012 2120 hrs
NEW DELHI: Factory
activity picked up pace in Asia with China showing stronger momentum and
India also gathering steam, according to business surveys released on
Wednesday, buoying recovery hopes in the region.
HSBC's
Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI), a measure of manufacturing activity,
increased for China in April, suggesting the health of the world's
second-largest economy was improving.
India's factory sector also
edged higher month-on-month, led by new orders, the HSBC's Indian PMI
suggested, striking a brighter note for the South Asian country that is
facing escalating economic and fiscal challenges.
"These are
still soft numbers but we may be seeing Chinese -- and Asian growth --
starting to stabilise," Brian Jackson, senior emerging markets
strategist at the Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong, told AFP.
HSBC's
China PMI improved to 49.3 in April from 48.3 in March and "confirms
the pace of China's slowdown has stabilized", said HSBC China economist
Hongbin Qu.
An index reading over 50 signals growth while below 50 indicates contraction.
While
HSBC's China index reading was not as strong as Beijing's official PMI
reading the previous day which hit a 13-month high of 53.3 in April, the
HSBC economist said: "We expect Chinese GDP growth to bottom out in the
second quarter and recover modestly to over 8.5 percent in the second
half."
China's annual growth slowed to 8.1 percent in the first
quarter of 2012 from 8.9 percent in the previous three months -- its
slowest pace in nearly three years.
"These (PMI) numbers are good
news along with the numbers out of the US," said Royal Bank of Canada's
Jackson, referring to the US Institute for Supply Management, which
reported a surprise rise Tuesday in its widely watched manufacturing
index.
Strong orders lifted India's PMI manufacturing activity to
54.9 in April from 54.7 in March even as rising prices spotlighted
still stubborn inflation risks.
"Business conditions seem to have
improved a bit and the increase in order flows from domestic and
overseas customers suggest the pace of growth could hold up in coming
months," said HSBC's chief India economist Leif Eskesen.
There
was also upbeat data from South Korea with factory output rising at the
fastest clip in more than a year as new orders sustained a third
straight month of manufacturing expansion.
Monetary easing by key
trading partners, such as China, "is filtering through to higher demand
for Korean goods", said HSBC economist Ronald Man.
The firmer
Asian manufacturing numbers swept many Asian stock markets higher with
Hong Kong rising 1.02 percent, Shanghai climbing 1.76 percent and Seoul
adding 0.86 percent even as gloom over eurozone output remained a
bearish factor.
The Markit Purchasing Managers' Index for the
euro zone slumped to 45.9 from 47.7 in March, signalling shrinking of
the manufacturing sector, and suggesting a growing economic chasm
between Europe and the rest of the world.
Taiwan's manufacturing
sector grew in April, albeit at a weaker pace, with HSBC saying low
demand in the West would constrain the island's export expansion for a
while longer, making domestic demand an important driver.
In Indonesia, manufacturing also grew at a slightly slower clip in April.
- AFP/cc
Source: Channel New Asia
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