China's Q2 GDP growth slows to 0.8% q/q, raises stimulus expectations
FILE PHOTO: Employees work on the trucks production line at Shaanxi Automobile Group in Xian · Reuters

(Reuters) - China's economy grew at a frail pace in the second quarter, although the annual figure was flattered by base effects, data showed on Monday, with overall momentum faltering rapidly due to weakening demand at home and abroad.

Gross domestic product (GDP) grew just 0.8% in April-June from the previous quarter, data released by the National Bureau of Statistics showed, versus analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll for a 0.5% increase and compared with a 2.2% expansion in the first quarter.

On a year-on-year basis, GDP expanded 6.3% in the second quarter, accelerating from 4.5% in the first three months of the year, but the rate was below the forecast for growth of 7.3%.

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KEY POINTS

* Q2 GDP +6.3% y/y (f'cast +7.3%, Q1 +4.5%)

* Q2 GDP +0.8% q/q s/adj (f'cast +0.5%, Q1 +2.2%)

* June industrial output +4.4% y/y (f'cast +2.6%, May +2.7%)

* June retail sales +3.1% y/y (f'cast +3.2%, May +12.7%)

* Jan-June fixed asset investment +3.8% y/y (f'cast +3.5%, Jan-May +4.0%)

* Jan-June property investment -7.9% y/y (Jan-May -7.2%)

* Jan-June property sales by floor area -5.3% y/y (Jan-May -0.9%)

MARKET REACTION:

The yuan lost about 0.37% to 7.1680 per dollar after the data release. The yuan recently hit 8-month lows, pressured by the firming U.S. dollar and a flurry of weaker-than-expected weak Chinese data. It has lost more than 3% to the dollar so far this year.

Chinese stocks fell, with benchmark Shanghai Composite index and blue-chip CSI 300 Index both dropping more than 1%.

COMMENTARY:

CHRISTOPHER WONG, CURRENCY STRATEGIST, OCBC, SINGAPORE

"Second quarter GDP figures were disappointing, but June's activity data was better than expected, perhaps suggesting tentative signs that the deceleration momentum is slowing."

LOUIS KUIJS, CHIEF ASIA ECONOMIST, S&P GLOBAL, HONG KONG

"The GDP data is a little hard to interpret because the year-on-year number was significantly weaker than I expected but the quarter-on-quarter number, as reported by the NBS, is a little higher than what I expected, so I'm trying to see if they have revised some of the earlier data."

"Another observation is that the consumption side is disappointing. We had double-digit retail sales growth in April and May from a very low base, and that has petered out to have only 3.1% nominal retail sales growth, indicating consumers remain quite reluctant."

CAROL KONG, ECONOMIST, COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA, SYDNEY

"The data suggests that China's post-COVID boom is clearly over. The higher-frequency indicators are up from May's numbers, but still paint a picture of a bleak and faltering recovery and at the same time youth unemployment is hitting record highs.