China PMI Miss Fails To Derail Asia

 | Dec 01, 2015 03:36AM ET

Despite disappointing Chinese data, Asian stocks seemed to put concerns of a China crash behind them as they rallied strongly through the session. There were some major moves in the currencies as well with a strong risk-on move driving buying in the Aussie and the Kiwi. The US dollar was clearly giving some gains back which helped many Asian currencies pairs. This also spilled across into materials indices which saw some brief respite from the weaker US dollar.

China PMIs

Fears that China’s monetary easing and fiscal spending have not done enough to prop up the economy have only increased in the wake of today’s PMI release. China’s manufacturing PMIs both stayed heavily in contractionary territory despite the NBS PMI declining and the Caixin PMI increasing. It does seem quite noteworthy that the NBS PMI, associated with bigger state-owned corporates, dropped to its lowest level since August 2012. There was little to cheer from the breakdown in its components either. In the two key sub-components, Output slowed from the previous month and New Orders returned to contractionary sub-50 territory.

Despite staying firmly below 50, the Caixin PMI (associated more with small and medium private sector companies) did improve to its strongest reading since April. Output in the index also clawed its way back to 50 from 48.1 the previous month. However, New Orders declined further from the previous month. On the bright side, the NBS non-manufacturing PMI bounced back to 53.6 from 53.1 the previous month, with hope for China’s future growth continuing to rest on the services sector and consumption growth.