Factory activity rose in China, the United States and Germany
in January, and the three manufacturing superpowers drove
gains in global output even as Europe struggles with fallout
from its festering debt crisis.
But even as China defied expectations that its factory output
would contract in January and German output improved for the
first time in four months, the data released showed new signs
of the threats from Europe's troubles.
New export orders fell in China, and manufacturing in France
and several other European nations contracted.
"There is an awful long way to go yet, and given the
headwinds that these economies face I would be cautious about
being too optimistic," said Peter Dixon at Commerzbank.
JPMorgan's global manufacturing index, based on surveys of
purchasing managers around the world, improved to a reading
of 51.2 in January from 50.5 in December. Readings above 50
indicated growth.
In China, the government's official purchasing managers
Aindex (PMI) inched up to 50.5 in January from 50.3 in
December, as new orders rose to a three-month high.
While China's growth provides the global economy with a
needed boost, new export orders fell sharply in the Asian
giant, underscoring the troubles in Europe that keep Asia's
export-reliant countries vulnerable.
"As external demand is now fading clearly, Chinese exporters
are facing increasing difficulties," China's finance
minister, Xie Xuren, said in remarks on Wednesday.
In Europe, Germany's gains propelled a rise in the Eurozone
Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index, compiled by Markit,
to 48.8 last month from 46.9 in December. But the index
marked its sixth month in contraction territory, below the 50
mark.
In the United States, the manufacturing sector grew at its
fastest pace in seven months in January as new orders
improved.
The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said its index of
national factory activity rose to a reading of 54.1 from a
revised 53.1 the month before, falling shy of expectations
for 54.5.
Data from Britain was also upbeat, as the manufacturing
sector unexpectedly grew in January. The PMI rose to 52.1
from 49.6, easily beating expectations for 50.0.
The euro and global equity markets surged as the U.S.,
Chinese and German manufacturing data drove investors'
optimism on the path of the global economy.
In Asia, the manufacturing sector's performance varied
widely. India's factories posted their fastest growth in
eight months in January. Unlike most of its Asian peers,
India's economy is far less exposed to export demand.
India's PMI reading of 57.5 in January marked almost three
years of expansion in the manufacturing sector and brought
some cheer to an economy hurt by monetary policy tightening
and the government's policy paralysis.
In South Korea, manufacturing sector activity and new export
orders both shrank for a sixth straight month in January, the
longest losing streak in three years. And in Taiwan,
faltering exports bit into factory activity, which shrank for
the eighth straight month.
South Korean exports posted a shocking 6.6 percent drop from
a year earlier in January, far worse than the 0.7 percent
consensus in a Reuters poll. Its exports to the European
Union tumbled 45 percent in the first 20 days compared with
the same period a year earlier.
Indeed, the euro zone is expected to be in recession during
the first half of this year, according to a Reuters poll, but
this assumes the region's debt crisis will not flare out of
control. [ECILT/EU
On Wednesday, Belgium became the first euro zone member
formally to fall into recession in the second half of last
year, data showed. Belgium is often cited as a harbinger of
things to come in Europe.
Fears that Greece could face a disorderly default if it does
not quickly secure a debt swap deal with private creditors,
or that Portugal might require a second bailout, continue to
rattle investors.
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