Chinese manufacturing activity hit a seven-month low in June, data from HSBC showed Thursday, putting pressure on Beijing to do more to boost the world's second-largest economy.
The banking giant said preliminary figures from its closely watched purchasing managers' index (PMI), which gauges the manufacturing sector, fell to 48.1 in June from 48.4 in May on shrinking exports and weak domestic demand.
The estimate is typically based on approximately 85% to 90% of total PMI survey responses each month and is designed to provide an accurate indication of the final PMI data, according to HSBC.
The June figure also marked the eighth consecutive month that manufacturing has contracted. A PMI reading above 50 indicates expansion, while a reading below 50 points to contraction.
More Intervention Likely
Analysts said the results suggest China will move again to boost its slowing economy, after cutting interest rates earlier this month and encouraging more government investment.
"China's manufacturing sector continued to slow in June," HSBC's co-head of Asian economic research, Qu Hongbin, said in the statement.
"With external headwinds remaining strong, exports are likely to decelerate in the coming months."
New export orders, a component of PMI, recorded their sharpest decline since March 2009, HSBC said, but did not give a figure. The bank will release the final data for June next month.
China's commerce minister said earlier this month that the country faces a "severe" trade situation this year, as weak demand in key exports markets such as the United States and Europe hit the economy.
In May, exports were better than expected, rising 15.3% year-on-year to $181.1 billion, but analysts say such growth may be short-lived.
Domestic Demand Flags
In a further worry for the economy, weaker prices and a contraction in new orders suggested domestic demand is also flagging, Qu said.
"We expect more decisive policy stimulus to reverse the growth slowdown," he said.
China on June 8 cut interest rates for the first time in more than three years in a bid to boost the economy, while the government has also trimmed the amount of cash banks must keep in reserve three times since December, most recently in May.
"China will likely speed up loosening monetary policy in the future, with the magnitude depending on the situation with the eurozone debt crisis and the recovery in the U.S. economy," Liao Qun, chief economist at Citic Bank International in Hong Kong, told AFP.
China's economy grew an annual 8.1% in the first quarter of 2012 -- its slowest pace in nearly three years. The government will release the gross domestic product figure for the second quarter on July 13.
The government has reduced its economic growth target for this year to 7.5%, down from growth of 9.2% for all of last year and 10.4% in 2010.
Japan's Nomura on Thursday repeated its forecast that China's GDP growth will slow to 7.8% in the second quarter this year.
"Underpinned by increasingly accommodative monetary and fiscal policies, China's economy is in the process of bottoming out," Nomura's Hong Kong-based economist Zhang Zhiwei said in a research report.
"The PMI reading intensified worries over an economic slowdown," Zhang Yanbing, a Shanghai-based analyst at Zheshang Securities, told AFP.
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2012
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