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WRAPUP 6-China's economy shows signs of stabilising but property slump threatens outlook

(Adds state land sales data, paragraph 20)

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Industrial output, consumption indicators show improvement

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Property investment tumbles, private investment shrinks

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Real estate sector remains major drag on economic revival

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Analysts see more policy support to sustain growth momentum

By Ellen Zhang and Joe Cash

BEIJING, Sept 15 (Reuters) - China's factory output and retail sales grew at a faster pace in August, but tumbling investment in the crisis-hit property sector threatens to undercut a flurry of support steps that are showing signs of stabilising parts of the wobbly economy.

Chinese policymakers face a daunting task in trying to revive growth after a brief post-COVID bounce in the wake of persistent weakness in the crucial property industry, a faltering currency and weak global demand for its manufactured goods.

Industrial output rose 4.5% in August from a year earlier, data released on Friday by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed, accelerating from the 3.7% pace in July and beating expectations for a 3.9% increase in a Reuters poll of analysts. The growth marked the quickest pace since April.

Retail sales, a gauge of consumption, also increased at a faster 4.6% pace in August aided by the summer travel season, and was the quickest growth since May. That compared with a 2.5% increase in July, and an expected 3% rise.

The upbeat data suggest that a spate of recent measures to shore up the economy are starting to bear fruit, prompting JP Morgan to raise its forecast of China's 2023 gross domestic product growth to 5% from prior 4.8%.

ANZ also upgraded its growth forecast for the world's second largest economy by 0.2 percentage points to 5.1%.

Yet, a durable recovery is far from assured, analysts say, especially as confidence remains low in the embattled property sector and continues to be a major drag on growth.

"Despite signs of stabilisation in manufacturing and related investment, the deteriorating property investment will continue to pressure economic growth," said Gary Ng, Natixis Asia Pacific senior economist.

The markets, however, showed relief at some of the better-than-expected indicators.

The Chinese yuan touched two-week highs against the dollar, while the blue-chip CSI 300 Index was up 0.2% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index climbed 1% in early morning trade.

Further buoying sentiment, separate commodities data showed China's primary aluminium output hit a record-monthly high in August while oil refinery throughput also rose to a record.

MORE POLICY SUPPORT NEEDED

Friday's data followed better-than-expected bank lending figures, a narrowing in the declines of exports and imports as well as easing deflationary pressure.