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Bank of China says profit rises 14.42% in 2008
Bank of China says profit rises 14.42% in 2008_English_Xinhua

BEIJING, March 24 (Xinhua) -- The Bank of China (BOC), the world's third largest lender by market value, said on Tuesday that its full-year profit rose 14.42 percent to 64.36 billion yuan (9.33 billion U.S. dollars) in 2008.

The total asset value was 6.95 trillion yuan by the end of last year, up 16.03 percent from a year ago. The bank's liability rose 16.63 percent to 6.46 trillion yuan.

The bank attributed the profit rise to the increase in its business revenue, cost saving and the income tax reduction.

The bank issued 3.3 trillion yuan of loans in 2008, up 15.63 percent year on year, and the bank's deposit jumped 15.95 percent to 5.1 trillion yuan, BOC said.

Its core capital adequacy ratio was 10.81 percent, a high level among its peers, as a result of its continuous efforts in stepping up risk control, the bank said.

The bank also raised its provision coverage ratio to 121.72 percent last year to prevent risks from non-performing loans. That's 15.35 percentage points higher than the 2007 level.

The bank had greatly reduced its investment scale in subprime mortgage bonds in the United States last year, BOC said.

It held 2.59 billion U.S. dollars of subprime mortgage bonds by the end of 2008, registering 1.08 percent of the bank's total investment in securities. The figure was 1.05 percentage points lower than a year earlier.

Net interest income of the BOC rose 6.67 percent to 16.29 billion yuan year-on-year. Fee and commission income surged 12.42 percent to 3.99 billion yuan last year.

The bank's shares rose 0.87 percent to 3.47 yuan Tuesday.
 
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China unveils health-care reform guidelines

China Monday unveiled a blueprint for health-care over the next decade, kicking off the much-anticipated reform to fix the ailing medical system and to ensure fair and affordable health services for all 1.3 billion citizens.

The Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and the State Council, or China's Cabinet, jointly endorsed and issued the Guidelines on Deepening the Reform of Health-care System after more than two years of intense debate and repeated revision.

By 2020, China will have a basic health-care system that can provide "safe, effective, convenient and affordable" health services to urban and rural residents, according to the tone-setting document.

This will be supplemented by a more detailed implementation plan for the three years until 2011. The plan has yet to be published, but the State Council announced earlier this year an investment plan of 850 billion yuan (124 billion U.S. dollars) for the reform in three years.

The core principle of the reform is to provide basic health care as a "public service" to the people, which requires much more government funding and supervision.

The document said the government role in "formulating policies and plans, raising funds, providing service, and supervising" must be strengthened in order to ensure the fairness and equity of the service.

"This is the first time that basic medical services in China are clearly defined as a public service for all citizens, which is part of essential rights of the people," said Prof. Li Ling, of Peking University.

The reform is aimed at "solving pressing problems that have caused strong complaints from the public," the document said, referring to long-standing criticism that medical services are difficult to access and increasingly unaffordable.

The blueprint highlights the establishment of a basic health-care system to cover all Chinese citizens to be formed on the basis of systems of public health, medical service, medical insurance and medicine supply.

The government will improve the public health network for disease prevention and control, health education, mother and infant health care, mental health and first aid services, according to the blueprint.

Public, non-profit hospitals will continue to be dominant providers of medical services, while more priority will be given to the development of grassroots-level hospitals and clinics in cities and rural areas.

Patients will be encouraged to use more grassroots-level hospitals and clinics, which can provide more accessible and affordable services, while comprehensive hospitals in big cities will be asked to provide more support to small, local hospitals in terms of personnel, expertise and equipment.

The government plans to set up diversified medical insurance systems in order to have urban employees, urban residents who do not work and rural residents covered by some sort of insurance plan.

The ratio of those covered by the basic medical insurance is expected to surpass 90 percent by 2011.

The reform is also aimed at improving the medicine supply system so that public hospitals and clinics are supplied with essential medicines with prices regulated by the government, according to the blueprint.

Other highlights include:

- The government to enhance the management and supervision of the operation of medical institutions, the planning of health service development, and the basic medical insurance system.

- Public hospitals to receive more government funding and be allowed to charge higher fees for treatment. But they will be eventually banned from making profits through subscribing expensive, sometimes unnecessary medicines and treatment, which isa common practice at present.

- Central and local governments to increase investment in the public health sector, grassroots-level clinics, subsidies for public hospitals, and basic medical insurance systems.

- Governments to increasingly regulate the pricing systems of medical services and medicines, with particular control on the price of basic services at non-profit hospitals and essential medicines those hospitals use.

- Supervision of medical institutions, health insurance providers, and pharmaceutical companies and retailers to be strengthened. Governments will also tighten monitoring of drinking water and food safety, and safety in workplace.
 
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Saturday, April 11, 2009

BEIJING: China’s vital exports fell 17.1 per cent in March, their fifth straight monthly decline, the government said on Friday, but the drop was not as sharp as the previous month.

The customs bureau data could provide hope that the impact of the world financial crisis on China’s key export sector may be easing, but it was still too early to make a firm assessment, analysts said.

“It certainly shows that exports remained weak. But the slowing pace is narrowing, which is a relatively positive sign at the moment,” said Jason Xu, an economist with China International Capital Corporation in Beijing. “It’s hard to say it signals a trend as uncertainties remain ahead.”

March’s decline in exports, which totalled 90.29 billion dollars, followed a miserable February that saw a 25.7 per cent year-on-year dive the worst slump in more than a decade.

Imports in March plunged 25.1 per cent from a year earlier to 71.73 billion dollars, the customs bureau said

This led to a 41.2 per cent year-on-year rise to 18.56 billion dollars for Beijing’s diplomatically sensitive trade surplus, according to the bureau.

China’s massive export machine has been humbled since late last year as the world financial crisis hit overseas demand for products made on what has become known as “the world’s factory floor”.

The slowdown has led to the closure of thousands of exporting factories in the country’s southern and eastern manufacturing heartlands.

At least 25 million migrant workers from China’s poor rural areas who normally find jobs in such factories are now unemployed, according to government data released last month.

Chinese authorities in November unveiled an unprecedented four trillion yuan (580 billion dollar) stimulus package to combat the crisis, and economists have said this has had some impact. Xu also pointed to some positive overseas factors.
 
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China's GDP up 6.1% in Q1 2009
China's GDP up 6.1% in Q1 2009

BEIJING -- China's economy expanded by 6.1 percent year-on-year in the first quarter of 2009, official data showed Thursday.

The quarterly growth was the slowest in the past 10 years as the global financial crisis continued to affect the world's fastest-growing economy. It was 4.5 percentage points lower than the first quarter of 2008 and down 0.7 percentage points from the previous quarter.

Gross domestic product (GDP) reached 6.5745 trillion yuan (about US$939 billion) in the first quarter, Ma Jiantang, director of the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), told a press conference.

Industrial output grew 5.1 percent year on year in the first quarter this year, with a rise of 8.3 percent in March.

Consumer price index, a main gauge of inflation, fell 1.2 percent year on year in March. This was compared with a decline of 1.6 percent in February, the first monthly fall since December 2002.

China's producer price index (PPI) fell 4.6 percent in the first quarter year on year. However, the statistics agency did not give a year-on-year figure for PPI in March, but said it declined 0.3 percent in March compared with February, a smaller monthly rate of decline than in the previous two months.

Retail sales grew 15 percent to 2.94 trillion yuan (430.4 billion U.S. dollars) in the first quarter this year.

China has started to implement a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package to counter the impact of the global slowdown, helping prompt a surge in lending in the first three months of the year.

"The overall national economy showed positive changes, with better performance than expected," the NBS said in a statement distributed ahead of a news conference.

"(We should) continuously improve macroeconomic policies and make efforts to realise sound and fast growth," it said.

Actually used foreign direct investment stood at 21.8 billion U.S. dollars, 5.6 billion U.S. dollars lower than the same period of last year.

In the first two months, the number of newly employed in urban areas reached 1.62 million, 210,000 fewer than the same period of 2008.

The per capita disposable income of urban residents rose 10.2 percent to 4,834 yuan for the first quarter. Deducting price factors, the increase reached 11.2 percent. That of rural residents also climbed 8.6 percent to 1,622 yuan.

The country's bank credit also grew in the first quarter. The narrow measure of money supply, M1 (cash in circulation plus corporate current deposits), was up 17.0 percent year on year to 17.7 trillion yuan.

The country's foreign exchange reserves rose 16 percent year-on-year to 1.9537 trillion U.S. dollars by the end of March.
 
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China's GDP up 6.1% in Q1 2009
China's GDP up 6.1% in Q1 2009

BEIJING -- China's economy expanded by 6.1 percent year-on-year in the first quarter of 2009, official data showed Thursday.

The quarterly growth was the slowest in the past 10 years as the global financial crisis continued to affect the world's fastest-growing economy. It was 4.5 percentage points lower than the first quarter of 2008 and down 0.7 percentage points from the previous quarter.

Gross domestic product (GDP) reached 6.5745 trillion yuan (about US$939 billion) in the first quarter, Ma Jiantang, director of the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), told a press conference.

Industrial output grew 5.1 percent year on year in the first quarter this year, with a rise of 8.3 percent in March.

Consumer price index, a main gauge of inflation, fell 1.2 percent year on year in March. This was compared with a decline of 1.6 percent in February, the first monthly fall since December 2002.

China's producer price index (PPI) fell 4.6 percent in the first quarter year on year. However, the statistics agency did not give a year-on-year figure for PPI in March, but said it declined 0.3 percent in March compared with February, a smaller monthly rate of decline than in the previous two months.

Retail sales grew 15 percent to 2.94 trillion yuan (430.4 billion U.S. dollars) in the first quarter this year.

China has started to implement a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package to counter the impact of the global slowdown, helping prompt a surge in lending in the first three months of the year.

"The overall national economy showed positive changes, with better performance than expected," the NBS said in a statement distributed ahead of a news conference.

"(We should) continuously improve macroeconomic policies and make efforts to realise sound and fast growth," it said.

Actually used foreign direct investment stood at 21.8 billion U.S. dollars, 5.6 billion U.S. dollars lower than the same period of last year.

In the first two months, the number of newly employed in urban areas reached 1.62 million, 210,000 fewer than the same period of 2008.

The per capita disposable income of urban residents rose 10.2 percent to 4,834 yuan for the first quarter. Deducting price factors, the increase reached 11.2 percent. That of rural residents also climbed 8.6 percent to 1,622 yuan.

The country's bank credit also grew in the first quarter. The narrow measure of money supply, M1 (cash in circulation plus corporate current deposits), was up 17.0 percent year on year to 17.7 trillion yuan.

The country's foreign exchange reserves rose 16 percent year-on-year to 1.9537 trillion U.S. dollars by the end of March.

Very good news for our best friend China.
We Pakistanis are praying for China's success. :china::china::china::china:
 
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BEIJING: China’s economy, battered by collapsing exports, grew at the slowest pace in almost 10 years, probably marking its low point. Gross
domestic product expanded 6.1% in the first quarter from a year earlier, after a 6.8 % gain in the previous three months, the statistics bureau said in Beijing.

A 30% surge in urban fixed-asset investment in March and a jump in industrial output, both reported on Thursday, added to evidence that the government’s 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus plan is working. Premier Wen Jiabao cautioned that while the world’s third-biggest economy is in better-than- expected shape, China is yet to establish a solid foundation for a recovery.

“They’ve stabilized the economy and now the challenge is to think about how to support consumption and how to support private investment,” said Stephen Green, head of China research at Standard Chartered Plc in Shanghai.

“We’re still looking for stimulus measures to encourage consumption.” The report follows a statement from US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner that China isn’t a currency manipulator. His stance eases pressure on China to allow its currency to rise, which would hurt efforts to revive exports.

While stimulus measures have started to produce results, China faces faltering export demand, industrial overcapacity, unemployment and weak private investment sentiment, Wen said in a statement after a meeting of China’s cabinet.
Industrial output expanded 8.3% in March from a year earlier, up from 3.8% in the first two months. Retail sales rose 14.7%. Consumer prices fell 1.2% in March from a year earlier, compared with a drop of 1.6% in February. Producer prices fell 6%, the most since Bloomberg data began in 1999.

China’s expansion was the weakest since the fourth quarter of 1999, according to Bloomberg data, and less than the 6.2% median estimate of 13 economists.
 
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Will Chinese consumers rescue world economy?



April 21, 2009 -- Updated 0729 GMT (1529 HKT)



(CNN) -- When CEOs and professional investors in developed economies go to bed these days, some may pray for protection from markets in turmoil, share prices in the cellar and angry financial gods bringing fire and brimstone with every check of their Bloomberg terminal or the front pages of The Wall Street Journal.
Multinational automakers and other global companies are banking on Chinese consumers.

Multinational automakers and other global companies are banking on Chinese consumers.
more photos »

"Spend, China," they whisper. "Spend."

The dream of China is the life preserver many multinational corporations are clinging to, not without some reason. The recent Shanghai Auto Show perhaps showed that like no other. More than half a million people attended, including 1,500 automotive manufacturers from around the world.

Carmakers decided to use Shanghai as the launching point for 13 new models, most notably Porsche introduced its first four-door sedan, the Panamera, flanked by Chinese models and surrounded by a rapturous crowd of the world press. It's telling that such an important debut took place in China, rather than the company's home in Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen, where the German automotive industry is being buffeted by the high winds of the credit crisis.

While the Big Three from Detroit are fighting for their lives, China has more than 100 domestic car makers competing with multinational carmaker to get a piece of the growing Chinese car market. For the first quarter of the year, 2.7 million cars were sold in China -- besting U.S. sales of 2.2 million for the first time to become the world's largest car market. Video Watch CNN's Emily Chang discuss China's burgeoning auto market »

General Motors may be on the verge of filing for bankruptcy protection, but it has one bright spot on its balance sheets - China, where sales are expected to rise 17 percent this year, according to Kevin Wale, chief executive of GM China. While analysts predict global car sales WILL fall more than 8 percent this year, sales in China grew 10 percent in March, according to the Chinese government. "You have to be here, and you have to be here in a serious way," Dieter Zetsche, Daimler CEO, told CNN.


The automobile industry's hopes for China are emblematic for nearly every industry in the world. A Nielsen consumer confidence index shows Chinese consumers are more optimistic than most consumers elsewhere, rating 89 points compared to the global average of 77.

But all is not well in China. Before Lehman Brothers went belly up last September, an open question among financial academics was the issue of "decoupling"- the belief that developing markets such as China could absorb a drop in export business with increased domestic spending. But the ripple effect of Lehman's collapse created uncertainty -- growth in China is expected to drop to 6 percent this year from an average exceeding 10 percent in recent years, experts say.

While that may sound enviable to Western companies, analysts say China needs 8 percent growth to maintain current employment levels. "For a while it seemed China was relatively immune to the impact of the credit crisis, then the collapse of Lehman Brothers showed it wasn't," said Joseph Zveglich, assistant chief economist at the Asian Development Bank.

And even as Western companies clamor for the China market, it's an open question of whether Chinese consumers - be they nouveau riche or just emerging from poverty - are interested in foreign goods. But let's not forget the annual per capita income in China is just $1,000.


"There is a misconception that Western companies are good at penetrating the Chinese market," said Frederic Neumann, a senior economist at HSBC. "We see a lot (of penetration) in the auto sector and top end of the luxury market, but if you look at broad Chinese consumption trends, Western companies don't have the cachet" of local Chinese brand names.

"We see the top-end (consumer spending) weakening and consumption moving inland ... which suggests the best placed companies will be Chinese companies themselves, not Western multinationals," he said.



CNN.com
 
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Chinese economy rebounds, but return to rapid growth elusive

English_Xinhua

Special Report: Global Financial Crisis

By Xinhua Writer Cheng Yunjie

BEIJING, May 3 (Xinhua) -- Decoupling from the world, and the economic downturn much of it is experiencing, has proven impossible for China. But its resilience is receiving more recognition, with many leading financial institutions upgrading their 2009 growth forecasts since mid-April.

The adjustments for gross domestic product (GDP) growth, ranging from 0.5 to 2.3 percentage points, were based on signs of a turnaround in the first quarter. These indicators included stronger-than-expected real GDP growth, recovering property investment, a pick-up in power consumption and a surge in bank lending.

Merrill Lynch & Co. said it expected China's GDP to grow 7.2 percent in the second quarter and 8 percent this year, while Goldman Sachs raised its projection from 6 percent to 8.3 percent, the most optimistic forecast so far. Other forecasts include UBS, which raised its estimate by 0.5 point to 7 percent and CLSA Asia-Pacific, which lifted its outlook by 1.5 point to 7 percent.

China's policymakers can take heart from these forecasts. Every upward revision, big or small, given the global economic slowdown, might point to a better chance for the nation to achieve its 8-percent growth target. That level of growth is considered necessary to raise living standards while maintaining social stability.

But there's still the question of whether rapid growth is sustainable. Some analysts believe it isn't unless China can rebalance its economy and achieve higher efficiency, lower environmental costs and a more reasonable balance among investment, trade and consumption.

QUANTITY OR QUALITY?

In an interview with Xinhua, Stephen Roach, chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, urged Chinese authorities to get more serious about stimulating private consumption because the global economy remains "pretty weak" and might only achieve a weak recovery.

"China has responded to the crisis the way it has always responded to global problems. That is, using proactive fiscal stimulus mainly in the infrastructure area to provide temporary support in the downturn until the global economy comes back. It worked in the 1997 Asian financial crisis and the 2000-2001 mild recession. But this is a different sort of problem," said Roach.

"Once the stimulus wears off and if there is no follow-through, the Chinese economy will weaken again. I don't think exports will recover in the weak global economy."

Domestic economists voice similar worries, saying that the speed of growth doesn't matter as much as the quality. Liu Shangxi, deputy dean of the Research Institute for Fiscal Science at the Ministry of Finance, said that the 6.1-percent year-on-year growth in the first quarter had been "fairly good" for China. But, he said, "sometimes, it's worth slowing down a bit to have the economy move more stably."

Wang Xiaoguang, an economist with the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), the chief planning agency. said that the government's annual growth target had become mostly symbolic.

For five years in a row, the target was 8 percent, and for five years in a row, the growth rate overshot the target. Wang said the government had faced a dilemma: a cut in the target might undermine public confidence while a rise might tempt local governments to over-invest to meet a high growth target.

The turnaround signs mostly reflected the impact of the 4-trillion-yuan (586 billion U.S. dollars) stimulus package. Meanwhile, retail sales still trailed investment in contributing to growth. Local economists warned that the economy remained unbalanced and vulnerable.

"Historical records show that adjustments in the Chinese economy would take two to three years, on average. Seven months have passed since the impact of the global financial crisis began to tell on the local economy.

"With a turnaround in sight, recovery might come earlier than expected but there are still risks of a further slowdown," Chen Dongqi, deputy chief of the Macro-Economic Research Institute under the NDRC, told a business development forum in Guangdong in late April.

BUYING CURE

It's widely accepted among economists that China should boost domestic private consumption by leading individuals to buy more and save less. The key question is: how?

"Two big programs" Roach advocates call for doubling the investment in social security immediately to 150 billion U.S. dollars and establishing a goal of raising consumption as a share of the economy from 36 percent to 50 percent within five years.

"What I think is missing here is the social safety net, social security pension and unemployment insurance. Because of the absence of the safety net, China has seen a high level of precautionary saving," he said.

Roach suggested that China develop a private pension system in particular so total employee compensation could rise in tandem with productivity. "Chinese companies need to partner with their workers and provide medical care [and] retirement investing for their workforce. Chinese workers' total pay package should have both wages and benefits," he said.

Liu agreed that the primary task in expanding consumption was to raise incomes. "Securing the legitimate interests of workers is particularly significant when the economy slumps. It would be like drinking poison to quench one's thirst if businesses sought to expand corporate earnings at the cost of workers' pay and benefits," he said.

Low labor costs and massive capacity have propped up China's prosperity over the past decades. But the proportion of wages to national income has been on a long decline since the 1990s.

Between 2002 and 2006 alone, economists estimate the figure dropped from 62.1 percent to 57.1 percent. Meanwhile, the contribution of consumption to GDP growth fell from 43.6 percent to 38.9 percent.

"A more meaningful index to judge the sustainability of China's economic growth would be the proportion of wages to national income," Liu said. "If this ratio did not rise, people would remain poor, and thus expanding consumption would be empty talk."

Chinese are far from wealthy. Only 4 percent of the workforce, and just 10 percent of the urban workforce, earn more than 2,000 yuan a month, the threshold for individual income tax.

As Chinese residents hold 2.43 trillion yuan in aggregate deposits, economists say one immediate way to boost consumption would be to stabilize spending on staple property -- including housing and automobiles -- and support tourism and cultural activities.

"People spend much of their money on housing and food. The government should encourage people to entertain themselves more," Wang said.

CHINA 'NO LOCOMOTIVE'

Although China might be the first major economy to recover from the downturn, economists disagree on when China will return to sustained high growth.

Morgan Stanley, for example, has forecast a firm recovery by mid-year, but said sustainable growth through 2010 would still hinge on what happens in other countries.

"China will be stronger. But will that strength be enough to allow others to follow in its footsteps? I don't think so," said Roach.

"Most of China's resilience comes from infrastructure building, roads, property consumption ... [this] won't have an impact on the United States and Europe. This resilience is only temporary while its stimulus is local rather than global."

Central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan also warned in late April during World Bank-IMF meetings in Washington that the rebound in China's economy had to be consolidated. He said conditions in China would permit rapid economic development again, once macroeconomic policies such as the stimulus plan took effect.

Challenging internal and external conditions, he said, included continuously shrinking external demand, a relatively large decline in exports, overcapacity in some industries, falling government revenue and lingering employment pressure.

As China emerges from the shadow of the downturn, together with many of its Western partners, the world is closely watching the socialist market economy that it is still trying to develop.

It was interesting to see that there was much "the ideologically-constrained West" could learn from China, just as there was much China could learn from the West, said Roach.

"China has gone slow in many areas, especially in the opening up of its financial market. But China made the right choice," he said.

"Focusing on stability is a huge plus for China. But the nation must be vigilant in its financial policies, especially monetary and regulatory policies, and not allow asset bubbles and financial innovations it doesn't understand," said Roach.
 
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China, Japan, S Korea reach agreement on distribution ratio of regional reserve pool

English_Xinhua

·China, Japan, and South Korea will contribute to the $120-billion pool on a 2:2:1 ratio.
·They vowed to enhance regional economic and financial cooperation under current circumstances.
·They pledged to make due efforts to the regional financial stability and economic revival.

BALI, Indonesia, May 3 (Xinhua) -- China, Japan, and South Korea have reached an agreement on the distribution ratio of a 120-billion-U.S. dollar regional foreign-exchange reserve pool plan here on Sunday.

China, Japan, and South Korea will contribute to the pool on a 2:2:1 ratio, namely 38.4 billion U.S. dollars from China and Japan each and 19.2 billion from South Korea.

The agreement on the reserve pool, established to help countries tackle a possible foreign capital flow shortage, was reached at a meeting of finance ministers of the three countries on Sunday.

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China economic boost helps stock market rally

PARIS (AFP) --

World stock markets advanced on Monday after encouraging signals from the Chinese economy as well as news of Fiat's plans to create a new global auto industry giant despite the economic crisis.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 2.24 percent and the tech-heavy Nasdaq index was up 1.64 percent in mid-day trading.

Paris closed up 2.47 percent and Frankfurt gained 2.89 percent, while the London Stock Exchange was closed for a public holiday in Britain.

Tokyo was also closed for a holiday but Hong Kong soared 5.54 percent and Shanghai added 3.32 percent after a report from a government think tank put China's second-quarter economic growth at seven percent from a year earlier.

The CLSA China Purchasing Managers Index, or PMI, a closely watched indicator in the world's third-largest economy, also rose sharply to 50.1 in April from 44.8 the previous month. It was the first expansion in nine months.

Stocks were given an added boost by easing fears of a global pandemic of the swine flu virus, which rattled financial markets last week and had threatened a possible further delay in any recovery for the world economy.

"People are treating swine flu as a non-event," said Goh Mou Lih, head of research at Westcomb Securities in Singapore.

"And with the better US consumer confidence data, the market's perception now is that the economy is going to turn around," he said.

In Hong Kong, Patrick Yiu, associate director at CASH Asset Management, told Dow Jones Newswires: "The whole investor theme is about expectations of an economic recovery, not only in China, but also globally."

That confidence carried through to Wall Street, where analysts at Charles Schwab & Co. said the positive data from China was helping "further the argument that the worst of the global recession may be in the rearview mirror."

Todd Salamone at Schaeffer's Investment Research said: "We are seeing evidence... that suggests the big money players are returning to the stock market. These players are a huge source of fuel."

Investors remained concerned however about the so-called stress tests of the top 19 banks in the United States expected later in the week, which could reveal that some banks may need further shoring up of their capital base.

But good news from the troubled real estate sector helped boost US stocks.

One report showed pending US home sales rose 3.2 percent in March after a 2.0 percent increase in February. A separate report showed construction spending increased 0.3 percent in March after five monthly declines.

Another factor in the global rally was an announcement by Fiat that it intends to take over General Motors' ailing German unit Opel to create a global industry giant following its tie-up with Chrysler announced last week.

In an interview with the Financial Times, Fiat boss Sergio Marchionne outlined plans to build the world's second biggest auto company after Japan's Toyota and said a deal with Opel would be "a marriage made in heaven."

Shares were given an added boost by the Purchasing Managers Index for the 16-nation eurozone, which rose in April to its highest level in six months.

The new PMI, which measures business activity in the eurozone, was at 36.8 points -- still below a 50-point threshold indicating growth.

There was some bad news from Europe however with the European Commission forecasting that the EU and eurozone economies would contract 4.0 percent in 2009 and would continue to shrink in 2010, dashing hopes of a quick recovery.

Copyright © 2009 AFP All Rights Reserved
http://www.timesoftheinternet.com/70765.html
 
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China's economy may regain growth momentum in H2 of 2009

As the risk of deflation looms large on top of weaker exports and declining private real estate investment, China's economy may continue to slow down in the quarters immediately ahead but regain growth momentum in the second half of next year, according to a Morgan Stanley report released on Wednesday.

In its China Economics Outlook for 2009, the Hong Kong-based Morgan Stanley Asia forecast China's baseline GDP growth would be around 7.5 percent next year, with the bull and bear scenarios projected at 9 percent and 5 percent respectively.

The projection came after the country's economic indicators showed that the impacts from the global financial crisis on China's tangible economy have become much severer.

The exports totaled $115 billion last month, down 2.2 percent year-on-year in the first monthly decline since June 2001, the General Administration of Customs said on Wednesday. The previous decline, a much smaller 0.6 percent, reflected slumping US demand after the tech bubble burst.

The producer price index (PPI), a measure of inflation at the factory level, decelerated sharply to an annual rise of 2 percent in November. It was also slowest rise for the PPI since May 2006, which prompted worries about the fast-slowing economy and rising deflation risks.

Late last month, the World Bank has revised down its forecast for China's GDP growth of next year from 9.2 percent to 7.5 percent.

Wang Qing, Morgan Stanley Asia chief economist on the Chinese economy, said that three factors, namely the cooling-down in real estate investment, a massive de-stocking of raw material inputs in the immediate aftermath of the collapse of international commodity prices and the weakening external demand, had caused China's economy to slow down rather sharply.

The "triple-whammy impact" however could barely maintain its full force throughout 2009, although the ravage would likely continue to be felt in the first quarter of next year, he said. "We believe that China's economic outlook for next year is best characterized as getting worse before getting better, laying the foundation for a firmer recovery in 2010."

As the fiscal stimulus package came much faster this time than that during the Asia financial crisis, Morgan Stanley expected the effect to be apparent by mid-2009. Besides, the slow recovery of the G3 economies -- the United States, European Union and Japan-- after the unprecedented monetary and fiscal policy actions might have led to an improving external demand by the second half of next year and thus would contribute to a modest recovery of the Chinese economy.

China's economy may regain growth momentum in H2 of 2009
 
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PBoC to maintain loose monetary policy
Economics & Trade

7 May 2009

In its quarterly monetary policy report posted on its website Wednesday, the People's Bank of China (PBoC) said it will ensure an "ample" supply of money, Bloomberg reported. While the central bank said the Chinese economy has performed better than originally expected, it still does not believe the recovery is on firm footing; the bank noted that while new lending has surged, the lending is over-concentrated on government projects and does not provide enough to smaller businesses. It advised lenders to pay attention to bad loans and assess the ability of local governments to repay debt. The bank also said that deflationary pressure is easing and that quarterly GDP growth is improving, without providing figures.

PBoC to maintain loose monetary policy - China Economic Review
 
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Michelle Obama's Footwear boosts Chinese Exports​
Posted by: Frederik Balfour on May 08

Not since Jacqueline Kennedy’s time in Camelot has the First Lady’s fashion developed such a following. And now, it seems the popularity of Michelle Obama’s footwear is helping boost the fortunes of a far-flung factory in the Chinese city of Chengdu. Ever since the fashion website coolspotters.com flagged Michelle O sporting a pair of Bandolino Berry kitten pumps at a campaign function last fall, fashionistas have been clamoring to emulate the new style icon living in the White House. Though Bandolino brand owner New York City-based Jones Apparel Group refused to comment, management at Roeblan, the Chinese company which makes the Berry, says shipments to the U.S. were up 50% to 268,000 pairs in the first four months of this year compared with 2008—in stark contrast to Chinese exports which fell about 20% in the first quarter. “The fact that Mrs. Obama is wearing the Berry shoe is not the only reason for the increase in the US sales, but it does have a big effect,” Wu Deguo, owner of the factory said in an email. Just imagine how well things would be going if Ms. Obama shared Imelda Marcos’ passion for shoes.

Michelle Obama's Footwear boosts Chinese Exports - BusinessWeek
 
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EU, China agree to promote trade, investment(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-05-08 22:14

BRUSSELS - The European Union and China on Friday agreed to promote trade and investment as a way to counter the world economic crisis.

"The two sides agreed that in the face of the current severe international financial crisis, China and the EU should strengthen cooperation," Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan told journalists after two days of high-level talks with EU officials led by Trade Commissioner Catherine Ashton.

Wang said the two sides also reiterated their commitment to jointly advancing trade liberalization and investment facilitation "and maintaining an open environment for trade and investment."

The vice premier, standing with Ashton, also called for joint efforts with the EU to push for a swift conclusion of the long-stalled Doha Round of global trade talks.

"The two sides agreed to oppose protectionism in trade and investment, consolidate the already progress in the Doha round of negotiations and work for the early success of the round of negotiations," Wang said.

Wang's call was echoed by Ashton.

"Trade and investment will lead us out of the current crisis," she said. "The EU and China therefore stand together today in calling for the swift conclusion of the Doha Round, which will help us trade our way out of recession."

In addition to Wang and Ashton, eight EU commissioners and 12 Chinese ministers or vice ministers participated in the second annual meeting that covered a variety of topics, including trade, product safety and intellectual property rights.

EU, China agree to promote trade, investment
 
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Traders seek new markets

Cai Liangsui, a tea producer and trader from Fujian province, was expecting many buyers from Europe and the United States at Canton Fair, Guangzhou, but hardly any stopped at his booth.

Instead, those who showed the greatest interest in his products were from the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, Turkey and Poland.

It was the same for many other exhibitors at China's biggest trade show, which is regarded by traders, politicians and economists alike as a barometer on the state of the world's financial health. It was visited by 165,436 overseas buyers from 209 countries and regions, down 5.2 percent on the last session.

Transactions at the 105th Canton Fair, totaled $26.23 billion, a fall of 16.9 percent compared with last autumn's fair. Trade with the European Union and the US totaled $7.57 billion and $3.3 billion apiece, a decline of 28 percent and 8.1 percent respectively. However, there was a modest increase in deals with some emerging markets. Transactions with Argentina, India and the Association of South East Asian countries amounted to $380 million, $770 million and $1.93 billion respectively.

"Initially we wanted to target high-end markets such as the UK and the US," said Cai, speaking midway through last week. "But so far the buyers who may place some real orders are all from developing countries."

Chinese exporters have suffered heavily as a result of the global financial crisis, which has seen demand from Europe and the United States plunge. In the first three months of this year exports to the US fell by 15 percent and to the UK by 19 percent, according to the General Administration of Customs. It's a situation which has forced many to seek new markets in Latin America and Southeast Asia.

The few European and American buyers who did turn up proved to be very cautious.

"At the moment I am just looking," said Justin Walton, a British trader who sells outdoor clothing. His company experienced a 70 percent drop in revenues during last summer's sales. "Maybe I'll order some samples but no more than that," he added. "My retailers do not have the confidence. If they do not place an order, I cannot place one."

Wang Xincheng, general manager of China House Footwear Ltd, said the primary market for his company was now Latin America. It accounts for more than 50 percent of his total sales.

"Latin America is a big cake that everyone wants to have a bite of," he said. "Chinese companies usually have a price advantage and the market is not as saturated as it is in developed countries."

China's trade volume with Latin America reached $143.4 billion last year, 39.7 percent up from the previous year. In April, China signed a free trade agreement (FTA) with Peru, under which the two sides will gradually lower tariffs to zero on about 90 percent of goods. The deal is the second FTA package China has signed with a Latin American country. The first was with Chile in 2005.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) represents countries with big purchasing power and a large consumer base. There is also the possibility deals with its members could be conducted using RMB, making them less susceptible to fluctuations in exchange rates.

"Consumers in ASEAN countries normally have a habit of saving so the purchasing power is still there although the room for profit could be squeezed by the global economic downturn," Wang said.

The sixth China-ASEAN Expo is going to be held in Nanning, capital of Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region. It is widely thought ASEAN will replace Japan as China's third largest trading partner.

Although market diversification is the key strategy for most Chinese exporters trying to cope with the financial crisis, some still see trade barriers and a lack of trust in companies from emerging markets.

"Expanding into developing markets is the trend," said Zhu Wenyi, sales manager at Zhejiang Busen Garment Holding Co, which produces men's suits. "But the tariffs against Chinese products in some Latin American countries are still an obstacle in front of us," The company is considering opening stores in Ecuador in the next two or three years.

Lu Jiechuan, an exporter from Shandong province, said there were risks attached to doing business with developing countries in that the companies often had not been around for long and so didn't command confidence.

"Many Eastern European companies fail to offer letters of credit and buyers from the Middle East bargain a lot and the prices they offer are not as good as those made by American and European companies," he said.

Although the Canton Fair witnessed a modest increase in orders from new and emerging markets, the overall atmosphere was one of extreme caution. Many buyers had no plans to place orders at the fair but attended simply to check prices to get an idea of the future market.

"Of course we are getting more cautious," said Asgar Suliman, a textile trader from South Africa.

"People buy less and look for cheaper prices because of the economic downturn - so we are looking for cheaper prices too," He said he would only place an order after personally visiting some of the factories of Chinese producers.

"We want orders more than anything else," said Luo Dongxu, a footwear trader from Guangdong whose sales in the European and American market dropped by more than 50 percent.

"The orders booked by buyers from developing countries are usually small. But given the current situation, small orders are better than no order."

Canton Fair has been held in Guangzhou in the spring and autumn seasons every year since the spring of 1957.

It is co-hosted by the Ministry of Commerce and the Guangdong provincial government, and organized by the China Foreign Trade Center.

The Fair is the largest trade fair in China. Among China's largest trade fairs, it has the largest assortment of products, the largest attendance, and the largest number of business deals made at the fair.

Traders seek new markets
 
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