Whatâs going on here? Fresh data out on Thursday suggested that Chinaâs economy might finally be making moves, if you wade through the bad bits, that is. What does this mean? Chinaâs economy has been a real downer this year, and pundits will take what they can get at this point. So sure, an index tracking activity in the countryâs all-important manufacturing sector shrank for the fifth-straight month in August. But hey, it wasnât as much as economists expected and it edged a little closer to flatlining. These days, thatâs a win. Mix in a measure of new orders creeping up in the sector for the first time since March, and whispers are spreading that the worst may be over. Maybe thatâs because the governmentâs efforts are working or maybe itâs wishful thinking â but either way, itâs a tiny shred of hope for Chinaâs manufacturing-heavy economy. Why should I care? The bigger picture: Good news, if you look hard enough. Still, measures of non-manufacturing activity â think services and construction â are on the decline. But as weâve learnt, you need to dig to find the good stuff: services like transport, accommodation, and entertainment did alright last month. The blame, then, may land on the countryâs troubled property sector. If thatâs the case, the government needs to ramp up targeted support initiatives, or risk seeing small victories give way to massive failures. For markets: What goes up must crash down. Each promise of government economic support seems to be followed by a market rally, but every time they fizzle faster than the last as investors realize that not much actually changes. Thatâs a toxic relationship, one thatâs left Chinaâs main index a little battered this year. So with jaded investors far from won over by existing measures, many analysts reckon the government needs to unleash its beast to win them over â potentially one like the half-a-trillion-dollar stimulus package it rolled out in 2008. |