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Chinese lenders' bad loan ratio decreases
Xinhua | Updated: 2017-06-23

BEIJING - Chinese lenders saw their bad loan ratio decline by the end of May, fresh evidence of improved bank asset quality, the top banking sector regulator said.

Their bad loan ratio stood at 1.99 percent by the end of last month, 0.16 percentage points lower than a year earlier, Liu Zhiqing, deputy head of the prudential regulation bureau of the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC), said Thursday at a press briefing.

The value of outstanding non-performing loans (NPL) stood at 2.3 trillion yuan ($337 billion) by the end of May, said Liu.

NPL ratios at banks in coastal areas including Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Guangdong have declined substantially from a year ago, said Liu.

The bad loan ratio for Chinese lenders was 1.74 percent at the end of 2016, CBRC data showed.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2017-06/23/content_29857245.htm

@Shotgunner51
 
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Economic restructuring leading to quality growth in China
Xinhua, August 4, 2017

Economic data published by Chinese provincial-level regions for the first half year show that economic restructuring is bearing fruit and leading to stable and quality growth.

China's economy continued steady expansion in the first half of this year with GDP up 6.9 percent year on year to about 38.2 trillion yuan (5.6 trillion U.S. dollars), according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

Breaking down the national figures, provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities have published their own regional economic data.

Analysts say the data reflects new-found vitality in regional economies, unleashed by economic restructuring, which includes promoting consumption-led and innovation-driven growth, de-stocking outdated capacity, cutting corporate costs and deleveraging.

"We all know the Chinese economy has been an L-shaped growth shape. Many people ask when the downward stroke ends. Now if we look at the economic data and its connotation, the economy has entered a horizontal stroke and turned toward stable growth," said Yao Jingyuan, a research fellow at the Counsellors' Office of the State Council.

WESTERN PROVINCES IN THE LEAD

Western provinces and regions such as Tibet, Guizhou, Yunnan, Ningxia, Sichuan and Shaanxi have stayed in the top ten fastest-growing regional economies in China.

"The central and western provinces have developed well in recent years. Though they are late-movers compared with eastern counterparts, they have fared rather well economically," Yao said.

Tibet Province topped the national chart in growth of five categories -- GDP, industrial added value, total retail sales of consumer goods, annual disposable income for urban and rural residents.

Zhou Yong, a researcher in Tibetan Academy of Social Sciences, attributes the outstanding economic figures to the social stability of Tibet, which is essential for fast economic growth.

Disposable income for people in Tibet grew by more than 10 percent in both cities and rural areas in the first half year.

"People have stable jobs and a stable source of income to spend, so retail figures of consumer goods for H1 rise by 14 percent, the fastest growth nationwide," he said.

The services industry, such as tourism, is also booming in Tibet.

Another western province Guizhou, capitalizing on big data, the information industry and tourism, has emerged as another top-performer in economic development.

Apple Inc. is expected to set up a Chinese data center, costing 1 billion dollars, in Guizhou. In H1, revenue of Internet companies in Guizhou grew by 171 percent year on year. Tourism rose by over one-third year on year as the province becomes one of China's most popular tourists destinations.

RESHAPING TRADITIONAL INDUSTRIES

Shandong Energy Zaozhuang Mining Group in east China's Shandong Province has earned revenue from a new channel other than mining.

Its revenue for H1 was 55.8 billion yuan (about 8.2 billion U.S. dollars), up 83.88 percent year on year.

"We do not depend on coal any more. The bulk of our income, more than 74 percent, comes from logistics," said Man Shengang, board chairman of the group.

China's resource-rich provinces such as Shaanxi, Inner Mongolia and Shanxi have all shown better-than-expected economic data in H1, aided by a price rebound in energy products.

Inner Mongolia Yidong Coal Group in Ordos cut its production capacity by 5 million tonnes this year, but its profits have soared.

"The price for raw coal has nearly doubled," said Wang Xiaolong, the company CFO.

From January to June, companies in Inner Mongolia cut coal production by 6.6 million tons. Though regional GDP growth slowed from the first quarter and last year, it has entered a more quality growth period, regional officials said.

In H1, China's top coal producer Shanxi Province has moved out of a sluggish period caused by coal price dives, and recovered growth. Its H1 GDP growth was 6.9 percent.

"This is the first time since the beginning of 2014 that the Shanxi economy has entered a reasonable growth margin," said Zhang Xiaodong, spokesperson with Shanxi provincial statistics bureau.

STRIVING FOR LONG-TERM GROWTH

Though the regional data shows key economic drivers are still strong enough, many warn of uncertainty.

"There are still many unstable and uncertain factors in the international market, and structural imbalances have not been completely redressed, so there are still many challenges to maintain a truly stable economy," said Wei Huaxiang, deputy secretary-general of the Shandong provincial government.

Zhang Ping, head of Guizhou statistics bureau, also said the regional government needs to find sustainable sources to drive its economic growth.

"We need to have a smooth transition from reliance on old industries to new ones that are innovation-based," he said.

Some regions, such as the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei area, have increasingly leaned on technological innovation for growth.

Pang Jiangqian, spokesperson of Beijing Municipal Bureau of Statistics, said Beijing's high-end industries grew by 11.6 percent in H1. The capital's H1 GDP totalled 1.2 trillion yuan, up 6.8 percent year on year.

"Technological innovation has played an increasingly important role in driving the growth of Beijing," Pang said.

In July, Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei jointly published a talent promotion plan aimed to draw more skilled workers and creative minds by 2030.

"Technology and regional integration are the key to the development of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region. A great many companies, talent and skilled workers have gathered here, so it has great growth potential," said He Yafei, a researcher with Renmin University.

@AndrewJin , @Shotgunner51 , @Jlaw , @Han Patriot
 
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Economic restructuring leading to quality growth in China
Xinhua, August 4, 2017

Economic data published by Chinese provincial-level regions for the first half year show that economic restructuring is bearing fruit and leading to stable and quality growth.

China's economy continued steady expansion in the first half of this year with GDP up 6.9 percent year on year to about 38.2 trillion yuan (5.6 trillion U.S. dollars), according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

Breaking down the national figures, provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities have published their own regional economic data.

Analysts say the data reflects new-found vitality in regional economies, unleashed by economic restructuring, which includes promoting consumption-led and innovation-driven growth, de-stocking outdated capacity, cutting corporate costs and deleveraging.

"We all know the Chinese economy has been an L-shaped growth shape. Many people ask when the downward stroke ends. Now if we look at the economic data and its connotation, the economy has entered a horizontal stroke and turned toward stable growth," said Yao Jingyuan, a research fellow at the Counsellors' Office of the State Council.

WESTERN PROVINCES IN THE LEAD

Western provinces and regions such as Tibet, Guizhou, Yunnan, Ningxia, Sichuan and Shaanxi have stayed in the top ten fastest-growing regional economies in China.

"The central and western provinces have developed well in recent years. Though they are late-movers compared with eastern counterparts, they have fared rather well economically," Yao said.

Tibet Province topped the national chart in growth of five categories -- GDP, industrial added value, total retail sales of consumer goods, annual disposable income for urban and rural residents.

Zhou Yong, a researcher in Tibetan Academy of Social Sciences, attributes the outstanding economic figures to the social stability of Tibet, which is essential for fast economic growth.

Disposable income for people in Tibet grew by more than 10 percent in both cities and rural areas in the first half year.

"People have stable jobs and a stable source of income to spend, so retail figures of consumer goods for H1 rise by 14 percent, the fastest growth nationwide," he said.

The services industry, such as tourism, is also booming in Tibet.

Another western province Guizhou, capitalizing on big data, the information industry and tourism, has emerged as another top-performer in economic development.

Apple Inc. is expected to set up a Chinese data center, costing 1 billion dollars, in Guizhou. In H1, revenue of Internet companies in Guizhou grew by 171 percent year on year. Tourism rose by over one-third year on year as the province becomes one of China's most popular tourists destinations.

RESHAPING TRADITIONAL INDUSTRIES

Shandong Energy Zaozhuang Mining Group in east China's Shandong Province has earned revenue from a new channel other than mining.

Its revenue for H1 was 55.8 billion yuan (about 8.2 billion U.S. dollars), up 83.88 percent year on year.

"We do not depend on coal any more. The bulk of our income, more than 74 percent, comes from logistics," said Man Shengang, board chairman of the group.

China's resource-rich provinces such as Shaanxi, Inner Mongolia and Shanxi have all shown better-than-expected economic data in H1, aided by a price rebound in energy products.

Inner Mongolia Yidong Coal Group in Ordos cut its production capacity by 5 million tonnes this year, but its profits have soared.

"The price for raw coal has nearly doubled," said Wang Xiaolong, the company CFO.

From January to June, companies in Inner Mongolia cut coal production by 6.6 million tons. Though regional GDP growth slowed from the first quarter and last year, it has entered a more quality growth period, regional officials said.

In H1, China's top coal producer Shanxi Province has moved out of a sluggish period caused by coal price dives, and recovered growth. Its H1 GDP growth was 6.9 percent.

"This is the first time since the beginning of 2014 that the Shanxi economy has entered a reasonable growth margin," said Zhang Xiaodong, spokesperson with Shanxi provincial statistics bureau.

STRIVING FOR LONG-TERM GROWTH

Though the regional data shows key economic drivers are still strong enough, many warn of uncertainty.

"There are still many unstable and uncertain factors in the international market, and structural imbalances have not been completely redressed, so there are still many challenges to maintain a truly stable economy," said Wei Huaxiang, deputy secretary-general of the Shandong provincial government.

Zhang Ping, head of Guizhou statistics bureau, also said the regional government needs to find sustainable sources to drive its economic growth.

"We need to have a smooth transition from reliance on old industries to new ones that are innovation-based," he said.

Some regions, such as the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei area, have increasingly leaned on technological innovation for growth.

Pang Jiangqian, spokesperson of Beijing Municipal Bureau of Statistics, said Beijing's high-end industries grew by 11.6 percent in H1. The capital's H1 GDP totalled 1.2 trillion yuan, up 6.8 percent year on year.

"Technological innovation has played an increasingly important role in driving the growth of Beijing," Pang said.

In July, Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei jointly published a talent promotion plan aimed to draw more skilled workers and creative minds by 2030.

"Technology and regional integration are the key to the development of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region. A great many companies, talent and skilled workers have gathered here, so it has great growth potential," said He Yafei, a researcher with Renmin University.

@AndrewJin , @Shotgunner51 , @Jlaw , @Han Patriot
Western China is developing at an unprecedented speed.
I estimate in 2020 Western China's GDP will reach 3 trillion dollars.
In 2025, will be 5 trillion dollars.

City in Guizhou Province, Western China
 
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China's Consumer Confidence Index reaches new high
By Chen Meiling | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2017-08-11

China's Consumer Confidence Index reached 112 points from April to June, the highest score since the fourth quarter in 2013, a report said Thursday.

Chinese consumer confidence maintained a steady increase, as the country's economy continues to fare well, said a study by Nielsen.

Vishal Bali, managing director of Nielsen China, said China's CCI in Q2 suggested the continuous upward trend of the country's overall economy.

China's GDP growth stood at 6.9 percent in the second quarter of 2017, up 0.1 percentage point than market expectations, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

"As the national economy gains a steady momentum, Chinese consumers are becoming more willing to spend, with nationwide buying spree driving upgrade," said Bali.

The rising CCI was also due to consumers' optimistic perceptions of local job prospects, personal finances and immediate spending intentions, the report said.

Consumer confidence levels above and below a baseline of 100 indicate degrees of optimism and pessimism to the three factors above, respectively.

The personal finance state of consumers from the third and fourth-tier cities, especially those living in rural areas, has improved significantly. For example, the figure in the fourth-tier city rose by 3 points from the last quarter to 71.

The reason, said Bali, lies in the on-going supply-side reform and local economic policies aimed at boosting the less-developed regions.

"Fast-pace economic growth offers more job opportunities to local residents, the development of China's rural area and lower-tier cities will become a new driver for the country's future economic growth," said Bali.

"Households' steady growth in income will translate into a potential demand for purchase and investment," he added.

In the first six months of 2017, Chinese per capita disposable income rose to 12,932 yuan ($1,938.7), up 7.3 percent from last year, according to data of the National Bureau of Statistics.

Groceries ranked top in Chinese consumers' increasing spending, the study of Nielsen showed.

Consumers in higher-tier cities tend to spend more on better food and beverages, while those from lower-tier cities are willing to spend more on better daily necessities, it said.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2017-08/11/content_30467615.htm
 
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1st LD: China's industrial profits grow faster in first eight months
Xinhua, September 27, 2017

BEIJING, Sept. 27 (Xinhua) -- China's major industrial firms posted faster profit growth in the first eight months of this year, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said Wednesday.

Industrial companies with annual revenue of more than 20 million yuan (about 3.02 million U.S. dollars) reported profits of 4.92 trillion yuan in the first eight months, a 21.6-percent increase from one year earlier, the NBS said in a statement.

The strong growth marks a pick-up from the 21.2 percent in the January-July period.

In August alone, profits of major industrial firms rose 24 percent year on year, much faster than the 16.5-percent growth in July, the NBS said.

Among the 41 industries surveyed, 39 posted year-on-year profit growth during the first eight months.

NBS statistician He Ping said the strong growth was a result of price hikes in industrial products and lower production costs.

China's producer price index (PPI), which measures costs of goods at the factory gate, rose 6.3 percent year on year in August, 0.8 percentage points higher than the July level.

The price rebound has added some 127.3 billion yuan to the August industrial profits, accounting for 31.2 percent of the total profit increase last month, said He.

Meanwhile, for each 100 yuan of revenue, companies had to spend 85.44 yuan, a 0.64-yuan decrease from the same period last year, NBS data showed.

He also mentioned that the leverage ratio of Chinese industrial firms is on the decline amid the government's ongoing supply-side structural reform. By the end of August, their debt-asset ratio dropped 0.7 percentage points from a year ago to 55.7 percent.
 
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China's survey-based jobless rate lowest since 2012: official

(Xinhua) 14:57, October 10, 2017

BEIJING, Oct. 10 (Xinhua) -- China's job market is steadily expanding, with the survey-based unemployment rate falling to its lowest level since 2012, an official said Tuesday.

China's nationwide survey-based unemployment rate stood at 4.83 percent in September, the lowest since 2012, Ning Jizhe, head of the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) disclosed at a press conference.

Some 9.74 million new jobs were created in China's urban regions from January to August, which means the country has already fulfilled 88.5 percent of its official goal to create 11 million new jobs in 2017.

From 2013 to 2016, China's surveyed unemployment rate in 31 major cities stabilized at around 5 percent.

The number of migrant workers leaving their hometowns rose 2.1 percent in the second quarter compared with the same period last year, according to Ning.

The NBS survey-based jobless rate is usually higher than the registered jobless rate released by the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security, which came in at 3.95 percent by the end of the second quarter.

Creating more jobs to stabilize unemployment is a priority for the government as millions of workers face the prospect of redundancy due to mergers and reorganization in industries bogged down by overcapacity.

China aims to maintain the registered urban unemployment rate at under 4.5 percent for 2017.
 
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7% GDP growth likely in second half
(China Daily) 09:23, October 17, 2017

FOREIGN201710170922000437558935092.jpg


Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People's Bank of China. [Photo provided to China Daily]

The world's second-largest economy is likely to reach a growth rate of 7 percent in the second half of this year, China's central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan said on Sunday in Washington.

China's growth has slowed over the past few years, tumbling from more than 10 percent for years to 6.7 percent last year.

But since this year, the driving force of economic growth has somewhat recovered, thanks partly to the rapid growth in consumption, Zhou told an international banking seminar that coincided with the fall meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

The IMF forecast on Oct 9 that China's gross domestic product would grow by 6.8 percent in 2017.

"The country's GDP grew at 6.9 percent in the first half of 2017. In the next half, it may hopefully reach 7 percent," said Zhou, governor of the People's Bank of China.

China has made strenuous efforts in recent years to restructure its economy while maintaining steady growth. As a result, it has seen its economic fundamentals improve, with the consumption and service sectors playing a more important role and prices remaining stable.

Latest consumer price inflation data released by the National Bureau of Statistics on Monday show that the consumer price index rose by 1.6 percent year-on-year in September, down from 1.8 percent in August and well within the country's target of 3 percent for this year.

The producer price index increased by 6.9 percent year-on-year in September, up from 6.3 percent in August. The gain, the strongest since March, indicates that corporate profitability is robust and the overall economy remains resilient, analysts said.

China is scheduled to release its third-quarter data, including GDP figures, on Thursday. Economists widely expect GDP growth to reach an impressive 6.8 percent.

Zhou said China's efforts to cut overcapacity in the steel and cement sectors have yielded positive results, but the country needs large output from these industries to meet the needs of urbanization.

China is expected to attain this target, he said.

But the nation's accelerating urbanization requires a sizable output in those areas, he added.

"Excess capacity in the steel and cement industries has been a result of large-scale infrastructure construction and the quickening urbanization pace," Zhou told the seminar, which was also attended by US Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen and central bank governors from other major economies.

Overcapacity, especially a steel glut, has also been a concern of the US administration.

At the first China-US Comprehensive Economic Dialogue in late July, both sides agreed that steel overcapacity is a global issue that requires a global solution.

As part of its measures in this regard, China plans to reduce steel capacity by 100 million to 150 million metric tons from 2016 to 2020, according to Vice-Minister of Finance Zhu Guangyao.

Zhou also said that China has made much headway in deleveraging. "The overall leverage has begun to lower down and, although not drastically, it has become the trend."

***

7% growth? China seems not be able to slow down :laugh:。 Will China beat the super power in GDP growth this year?

 
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Dec 02, 2017 07:10 PM

New Economy Accounts for Greater Share of Inputs in November, Caixin Report Shows

By Fran Wang

The share of high-value added industries such as biotechnology, advanced-equipment manufacturing and financial and legal services in China’s overall economic inputs rebounded for the first time in three months in November, a private index showed Saturday.

The Mastercard Caixin BBD China New Economy Index (NEI) shows that new economy industries accounted for 30.2% of total economic inputs used to make goods and services last month, up from 29.3% in October.

The index aims to track the size of, and changes in, China’s nascent industries using big data. It measures labor, capital and technology inputs in 10 emerging industries relative to those used by all industries.

The November reading was the highest in three months and marked the index’s first rebound since August.

The rise in last month’s NEI was underpinned by a solid jump in capital input, one of the three subindexes of the indicator. Both the labor input and the technology input subindexes slid moderately in November from the previous month, according to the report compiled by Caixin Insight Group, the financial data and analysis platform of Caixin Media, and big-data research firm BBD, in collaboration with the National Development School of Peking University. The index is sponsored by global payments service provider Mastercard.

The NEI, launched in March 2016, defines a “new economy” industry as one that is labor and technology intensive but has a relatively low ratio of fixed capital, has sustainable and rapid growth, and is one of the strategic new industries encouraged by the government. The industries included in the index are: energy conservation and environmental protection, new energy, new-energy vehicles, advanced materials, new information technology (IT) and information services, high-tech services and research and development, biotechnology, financial and legal services, advanced equipment manufacturing, and culture, sports and entertainment.

The new IT industry continued to be the number one contributor among the 10 major industrial categories, making up 11.6 percentage points of the NEI reading last month, up from 10.4 percentage points in October and the highest share since July. It was the second-straight month the share of the sector has increased.

Biotechnology was the second, contributing 4.0 percentage points. It was followed by energy conservation and environmental protection, which made the third-largest contribution of 3.9 percentage points.

The Chinese government has been intensifying its nationwide campaign this year to reduce pollution, which has led to stricter controls on production by high energy-consuming and polluting industries such as coal, steel and aluminum. One of the government’s requirements is for enterprises to upgrade their emission-cleaning facilities, which could have benefited the environmental protection industry.

The average monthly entry-level salary in new economy sectors, based on data compiled from online career and recruitment websites, rose 1.7% from October to 10,122 yuan ($1,531) in November and enjoyed a premium of 4.8% over entry-level salaries in the economy as a whole. Hiring in new economy sectors inched down to 29.2% of total hiring in the economy in November from 29.4% the previous month.

https://www.caixinglobal.com/2017-1...n-november-caixin-report-shows-101179496.html
 
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