* FDI momentum is slowing though and trade outlook difficult
* Suggests policy will be biased towards supporting economy
BEIJING -
Reuters:
China bagged foreign direct investment (FDI) at a
record-setting pace in the first three months of 2012 but an easing in
its monthly momentum and a difficult trade outlook will keep monetary
policy poised to compensate for any dip in capital inflows.
The
first quarter inflow of US$29.8bil leaves China on course to surpass
2011's US$116bil record, even though inflows compared with a year
earlier have fallen for five successive months, Commerce Ministry data
showed.
A 53% leap in inflows to US$11.8bil in March from
February typical after the Lunar New Year was a fresh sign that capital
flow is firming enough to underpin money supply growth, following a
US$124bil first-quarter jump in foreign exchange reserves, providing
policy stays on its current pro-growth bias.
“I don't think this changes anything for monetary policy,” Alistair Thornton, economist at
IHS Global Insight in Beijing, told
Reuters.
Steady growth:
Workers assemble automobile parts at Changan Ford Mazda Automobile
plant in Chongqing. A 53% leap in inflows to US$ 11.8bil in March from
February is a fresh sign that China’s capital flow is firming enough to
underpin money supply growth— AP
China's government has
been fine-tuning economic policy settings since the autumn of last year
as the outlook for the global economy darkened, export growth sank and
capital inflows a core component of money supply stalled.
The
People's Bank of China (PBOC)
has cut by 100 basis points (bps) the ratio of deposits banks are
required to keep as reserves (RRR) to keep credit and money supply
growth steady. The two moves added an estimated 800 billion yuan
(US$127bil) of lending capacity to the economy.
The PBOC said
last week that broad money supply rose 13.4% in March from a year
earlier, stronger than market expectations for 12.9% and ahead of the
previous month's 13% pace.
Economists forecast another 150 bps,
or 1.2 trillion yuan in RRR cuts, for the rest of 2012 to help cushion
China's worst slowdown since the
global financial crisis of 2008-09.
“There
are signs that the economy has reached a bottom, but there's nothing to
suggest in recent data that equity investors should be positioning for a
strong rebound or anything like a V-shaped recovery,” Thornton said.
EXTERNAL DEMAND
China's
economic growth has slowed for five straight quarters. The annual
growth rate in the first quarter eased to 8.1% from 8.9% in the previous
three months, below an 8.3% consensus forecast in a
Reuters poll.
Reasonably
strong FDI and a return to an overall trade surplus of US$5.35bil in
March heralds the prospect that a revival in global growth is lifting
overseas demand just in time to compensate for a slowdown in the pace of
domestic activity.
FDI is an important gauge of the health of
the external economy, to which China's vast factory sector is
orientated, but is a small contributor to overall capital flows compared
to exports, which were worth about US$1.9 trillion in 2011.
Ministry
of Commerce spokesman, Shen Danyang, told a news conference on the FDI
data that the government was confident of achieving its target for trade
growth in 2012 despite a difficult international economic backdrop.
China targets 10 percent growth for exports and imports in
2012, but both goals were missed in March when imports rose 5.3
percent and exports increased 8.9 percent over a year earlier.
Beijing has pledged to bring its current account into
balance as it refocuses the economy more towards domestic
consumption and away from volatile foreign demand for
manufactured goods.
China's two biggest export markets faltered through 2011.
Demand from the
European Union was dogged by the sovereign debt
crisis, while a U.S. recovery was slow to take hold, especially
among consumers.
For the first quarter as a whole, Customs Administration
data from China shows the value of total exports was $430.02
billion, while imports were $429.35 billion - bringing the trade
account roughly into the balance targeted by the government.
"If we want export growth to be stable, we must ensure that
policies are stable," Shen said. "If there are any policy
adjustments, these adjustments will be more towards pro-exports
rather than limiting exports."
CURRENCY RISKS
But he said some exporters were nervous about the outlook
for their business, particularly after China loosened its
tightly controlled currency regime by doubling to 1 percent the
daily trading band for the yuan against the dollar.
"Some exporters are a little bit worried, so they are not so
sure about taking long-term orders, but only took short-term
orders, mainly because they are not confident in managing
exchange rate fluctuations," Shen said.
The change, a crucial one as China further liberalises its
nascent financial markets, underlines Beijing's belief that the
yuan is near its equilibrium level, and that
China's economy is
sturdy enough to handle important, long-promised, structural
reforms despite its cooling growth trajectory.
Slower growth is cautiously welcomed by China's leadership
as it allows them to make reforms, particularly to prices the
government sets, with a reduced risk of igniting inflation that
the ruling Communist Party fears could trigger social unrest.
The widening of the yuan's trading band is the most
significant adjustment made to China's currency regime since a
landmark decision in 2005 to de-peg the yuan from the dollar,
which set the Chinese unit on an appreciating path that has seen
it gain about 30 percent against the dollar.
In tandem, China has encouraged direct settlement of
international trade in yuan, amounting to 2.08 trillion yuan
($333 billion) in 2011, more than triple that in 2010, central
bank data shows.
Dariusz Kowalczyk, senior economist and strategist at
Credit
Agricole CIB in Hong Kong, said 11.7 percent of March FDI flows
were settled in yuan, up from 9.5 percent in February, 8.5
percent in January and 3.2 percent for all of 2011.
"Direct investment has become a new frontier for Chinese
yuan internationalisation," he wrote in a note to clients.
Beijing targets $120 billion in FDI inflows for each of the
next four years, drawing up new rules to encourage foreign
investment in strategic emerging industries, particularly those
that bring new technology and know-how to China.
The Q1 numbers are on course to achieve that.
"For foreign investors, China remains attractive compared to
other countries," Zhao Hao, economist at ANZ Bank in Shanghai,
said.
China's efforts to expand its own direct investments in
foreign countries are surging. Outbound FDI rose 94.5 percent in
the first quarter versus a year earlier to $16.55 billion.
"In the future, the trend is that FDI inflows will pick up
while outbound FDI will rise even faster, so the net inflows
will fall," Zhao said.