Instant View: China's economy contracts in Q2, global risks darken outlook

Customers wait in front of a restaurant in Beijing · Reuters

(Reuters) - China's economy contracted sharply in the second quarter while annual growth also slowed significantly, highlighting the colossal toll on activity from widespread COVID lockdowns, which jolted industrial production and consumer spending.

Gross domestic product fell 2.6% in the second quarter from the previous quarter, official data showed on Friday, compared with expectations for a 1.5% decline and a revised 1.4% gain in the previous quarter.

On a year-on-year basis, GDP in the April-June quarter grew a tepid 0.4%, missing forecast of a 1.0% gain, according to a Reuters poll of analysts, a sharp slowdown from 4.8% in the first quarter.

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KEY POINTS

* Q2 GDP +0.4% y/y (f'cast +1%, Q1 +4.8%, H1 +2.5%)

* Q2 GDP -2.6% q/q s/adj (f'cast -1.5%, revised Q1 +1.4%)

* June industrial output +3.9% y/y (f'cast +4.1%, May +0.7%%)

* June retail sales +3.1% y/y (f'cast 0.0%, May -6.7%)

* Jan-June fixed asset investment +6.1% y/y (f'cast +6.0%, Jan-May +6.2%)

* Jan-June property investment -5.4% y/y (Jan-May -4.0%)

MARKET REACTION:

The CSI300 index rose 0.4% to 4,340.53 by 0221 GMT, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained 0.2% to 3,286.61. [.SS]

COMMENTARY:

MARCO SUN, CHIEF FINANCIAL MARKET ANALYST, MUFG BANK, SHANGHAI

"The disruption from COVID-19 on domestic economic activities was more pronounced this year. So, the quarter-on-quarter contraction in Q2 was well expected. Now that the pandemic is largely under control, economic activities are expected to gradually return to normal."

"With domestic infrastructure investments starting to support the economy ... I think the economy will have a soft landing this year.

LI WEI, SENIOR CHINA ECONOMIST, STANDARD CHARTERED, SHANGHAI

"Looking ahead, we expect China's economy to pick up speed in the run up to the 20th Party Congress, on increased stimulus measures and easing COVID-19 control policies."

"Friday's Q2 GDP growth is very much in line with our forecast of 0.3% y/y. As a result, we maintain our GDP growth forecasts unchanged at 5.3% y/y for Q3, 5.9% y/y for Q4, and an average of 4.1% for the full-year 2022."

"We keep our call of no more changes to the MLF (medium-term lending facility) rate or the RRR (reserve requirement ratio) until end-2023. The window for further policy rate cuts has likely closed due to the increasingly hawkish stance of major central banks, an uptrend in China's CPI (consumer price index), and the likely economic recovery in H2. The authorities have limited room to continue to use the RRR as a regular liquidity injection tool."