China's GDP Growth Quickens to 7.9% on Credit Boom (Update2)

By Bloomberg News

July 16 (Bloomberg) -- China's gross domestic product grew 7.9 percent in the 
second quarter as the nation became the first of the major economies to rebound 
from the global recession.

The figure, announced by the statistics bureau in Beijing today, exceeded the 
7.8 percent median forecast of 20 economists in a Bloomberg survey and a 6.1 
percent gain in the first quarter that was the slowest in almost a decade.

China, the biggest contributor to global growth, overtook Japan as the world's 
second-largest stock market by value yesterday after a 4 trillion yuan ($585 
billion) stimulus package spurred record lending and boosted share prices. The 
first-half expansion laid the foundation for meeting the year's 8 percent 
growth target for creating jobs and maintaining social stability, the 
statistics bureau said today.

"China's growth is getting back on track after being pulled down by the global 
export slump," said David Cohen, an economist with Action Economics in 
Singapore. "It's leading the turnaround in the global economy."

The yuan traded at 6.8315 against the dollar as of 12:15 p.m. in Shanghai, 
unchanged from before the data were released. The Shanghai Composite Index rose 
0.7 percent.

Urban fixed-asset investment surged 35.3 percent in June from a year earlier, 
the statistics bureau said. The 33.6 percent gain for the first half was the 
biggest in five years. Industrial production increased 10.7 percent in June 
from a year earlier, the largest gain in nine months excluding seasonal 
distortions. Retail sales climbed 15 percent.

Falling Profits

The foundation of China's recovery is "not yet firm" after the economy 
stabilized in the first half and the government will stick to its "moderately 
loose" monetary policy and "proactive" fiscal stance, statistics bureau 
spokesman Li Xiaochao said.

"China still faces difficulties including shrinking external demand, falling 
corporate profits and declining fiscal revenue," Li said. "We're still facing 
great pressure in generating jobs."

China's economy is the only one of the world's 10 biggest still expanding. The 
People's Bank of China sold today one-year and three-month bills at the highest 
yields this year, guiding money-market rates higher to slow record growth in 
money supply.

The nation's foreign-exchange reserves rose to a record $2.132 trillion last 
quarter as investors abroad pumped money into stocks and property, a central 
bank report showed yesterday.

`Recovery on Track'

"China's recovery is on track and growth may accelerate to near 9 percent in 
the third quarter and 10 percent in the fourth quarter," said Lu Ting, an 
economist at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch in Hong Kong. "The government won't 
tighten policies too early but it should tell banks not to lend without limit."

China is targeting faster growth to maintain stability after the loss of 
millions of migrant workers' jobs and ahead of the 60th anniversary of 
Communist Party rule in October. Ethnic riots in Urumqi in the northwestern 
Xinjiang province on July 5 left at least 192 people dead.

The rebound in GDP snaps a two-year run of progressively slower growth.

Shanghai's benchmark stock index has climbed almost 90 percent from last year's 
low, with PetroChina Co. and Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. 
contributing the most.

Emerging economies, led by China, are set to regain growth momentum in the 
remainder of this year, helping the world economy to recover from the worst 
slump since World War II, the International Monetary Fund said in a July 8 
report.

China accounted for a third of global growth last year, according to IMF data, 
which uses purchasing power parity calculations to account for differences in 
exchange rates.

China shouldn't ignore the danger of future inflation as loans surge and global 
commodity prices rebound, the statistics bureau's Li said at today's briefing.

Consumer prices fell 1.7 percent in June from a year earlier, the fifth monthly 
decline and the biggest drop since 1999, today's data showed. Producer prices 
slid a record 7.8 percent.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a4Ko6hXpm7dM


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