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Chinese plant activity surges at fastest pace in year

2026-03-31 HKT 11:44
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  • The manufacturing purchasing managers' index rose to 50.4 from 49 in February, above the 50-threshold and hitting the highest point in 12 months. File photo: Reuters
    The manufacturing purchasing managers' index rose to 50.4 from 49 in February, above the 50-threshold and hitting the highest point in 12 months. File photo: Reuters
China's factory activity grew at the fastest pace in a year in March, underpinned by improved demand, an official survey showed on Tuesday, a welcome relief for an economy grappling with global supply chain strains and energy market volatility.

The ⁠stronger reading eases pressure on policymakers, though its durability is in doubt as surging energy prices driven by the Middle East war, and heightened growth risks, pose fresh headwinds for manufacturers reliant on exports and operating on thin margins.

"The outlook for Q2 is unclear at this stage, given the negative impact from high energy prices," said Zhang Zhiwei, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.

"The market is increasingly worried about the risk of global growth slowdown and supply chain disruption."

The official manufacturing purchasing managers' index rose to 50.4 from 49 in February, above the 50-threshold and hitting the highest point in 12 months, data released by the National Bureau of Statistics showed. It beat analysts' forecast for a 50.1 reading in a poll.

The manufacturing PMI was in contraction for most of 2025 and ⁠the first two months of 2026.

China's goods exports continued to power growth in January and February after last year's ⁠record US$1.2 trillion trade surplus, buoyed by firm ⁠global demand for electronics, particularly semiconductors. The Commerce Ministry said last week the momentum looked set to hold, even as geopolitical strains linger.

Yet the war in the Middle East is raising concerns for policymakers.

Pressure was already evident in the latest survey. The sub-index for ⁠purchase prices of main raw materials jumped to 63.9 in March from ‌54.8 in February, driven by rising bulk commodity prices and faster procurement by companies, the bureau said.

Output prices also rose, albeit at a more modest pace, suggesting limited pricing power.

The March PMI data may have been skewed by the Lunar New Year holiday, which fell in February, when factories often shut for longer than the official break, which stretched to a record nine days this year.

Businesses accelerated their resumption of work and production after the holiday and market activity improved, the bureau's statistician, Huo Lihui, said in a statement, adding that PMI readings improved across companies of different sizes.

The sub-indexes for output and new orders both ‌rose above 51 from below 50 the previous month, while that for new export orders improved to 49.1 from 45 in February.

China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, an industry association, said this month that the Middle East conflict could affect car exports in March. The Middle East accounted for around a fifth of China's vehicle exports last year.

Hikes in input costs could pressure wages and job security, which would in turn weigh on already chronically weak domestic demand.

China's ⁠economic activity outperformed ‌expectations in the first two months, buoyed by holiday spending and a rebound in property and infrastructure ‌investment on the back of government support.

The non-manufacturing PMI, which includes services and construction, also increased to 50.1 from 49.5 in February, the bureau's survey showed.

China's leaders have repeatedly vowed to shift the growth engine towards ‌domestic consumption to reduce reliance on external demand. But rebalancing reforms will take time, and as the fallout from the Middle East conflict deepens, businesses are likely to feel the pain more sharply in the near term.

"When the global situation is uncertain, reliance on China's industrial chain increases, similar to the situation at the beginning of the pandemic," said Dan Wang, director for ⁠China at Eurasia Group.

"However, exports and PMI may face risks in the second half of the year, as the Iranian issue could lead to a recession in major economies, especially the EU, which is China's most important trading destination." (Reuters & Xinhua)



Edited by Thomas McAlinden

Chinese plant activity surges at fastest pace in year