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China's factories slump, EU business wilts

London/Beijing - Chinese manufacturing slumped for a fifth month in March and the eurozone economy is showing new signs of wilting, according to surveys on Thursday that pointed to weakening global demand.

Only the United States is showing signs of momentum among the world’s top economies, underlined by data showing jobless claims fell to a fresh four-year low last week.

That was reinforced at mid-morning by a report from the New York-based Conference Board showing its leading economic index climbed 0.7% during February. It was a fifth straight monthly rise, the best string of gains since the US economy was coming out of recession in 2009.

Still, investors were unnerved by the reports from Asia and Europe, selling riskier assets such as stocks.

Thursday’s batch of purchasing managers' indexes (PMIs) suggested China and Europe will not contribute to a global upturn any time soon.

Factory activity in China shrank for a fifth straight month in March, hit by declining order books, disappointing exports and new hiring hitting a two-year low.

By contrast, Thursday brought more evidence the US jobs market is improving, with initial jobless claims falling by 5 000 to 348 000 last week - the smallest number since February 2008 and in contrast to expectations for a rise.

“The PMIs give a warning that even if the US economy seems to be doing quite well, that doesn’t necessarily translate to solid growth in every other part of the world,” said Jonathan Loynes, economist at Capital Economics in London.

China’s slowdown partly reflects the weakness of economies in Europe, its single biggest export partner. The PMIs suggested a eurozone recession is now unavoidable.

German and French manufacturing, which this time last year spearheaded the eurozone’s recovery, suffered a sharp decline this March that even the most pessimistic economists failed to predict.

Investors immediately hedged exposure to trades betting on a rebound in global growth. Brent crude oil pared losses to 0.3% after the US jobs data before falling again, to be down 1.3% to $122.58 a barrel.

The HSBC flash PMI, the earliest indicator of China’s industrial activity, fell back to 48.1 from February’s four-month high of 49.6, firmly below the 50 mark that divides contraction and growth.

The survey added weight to a string of downbeat anecdotes from major corporations on the world’s No 2 economy. BHP Billiton, the world’s biggest miner, said on Tuesday it was seeing signs of “flattening” iron ore demand from China.

Broad-based weakness in the five key components that generate the Chinese PMI surprised analysts, particularly those who had anticipated a clear-cut rebound in factory activity in March after the lunar new year disrupted output in the first two months and distorted data.

“This data suggests there’s something more profound at work, that it’s not just a lunar new year problem and that it’s not just affecting exports, but domestic demand,” said Tim Condon, chief economist and head of Asian research at ING in Singapore.

Europe flags again

Markit’s Eurozone Composite PMI declined unexpectedly to 48.7 in March from 49.3 in February, a full point below economists’ consensus of 49.7 and capping the first quarter of the year in disappointing style.

Most worryingly, the surveys suggested business activity in economic heavyweights France and Germany is starting to flag, with job losses mounting across the bloc at the fastest pace since March 2010.

“We’re more pessimistic than the consensus on the eurozone over the next year or two, both in terms of the outlook for the economy and also the currency union itself. So in that sense, these numbers give some support to that view,” said Loynes from Capital Economics.

The European Central Bank has pumped more than 1 trillion euros of cheap three-year loans into the banking system over the last four months - lowering bond yields - but the PMIs showed the impact of this has yet to be felt in the wider economy.

“While we still see a good chance of the recession in the eurozone coming to an end in spring, it seems unreasonable to expect more than an anaemic upward movement in the further course of this year,” said Christoph Weil, economist at Commerzbank in Frankfurt, in a research note.

PMI compiler Markit said the surveys were consistent with a decline of 0.1% in eurozone gross domestic product during the first quarter, following on from the 0.3% drop seen in the last three months of 2012.

With France and Germany now struggling, Markit said it was hard to see what could drive the currency union forward in the months ahead, especially since many of its smaller countries are already mired in recession.

“The austerity measures implemented there are going to keep some major economies such as Italy and Spain in recession, which is going to damage the region as a whole,” said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit.

By contrast, Britain should at least avoid a recession, but hopes that the UK economy will pick up momentum were dealt a blow on Thursday with news that retail sales suffered their biggest monthly fall in nine months in February.
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