China Economy to Rebound as Stimulus Spurs Investment

By Kevin Hamlin

April 17 (Bloomberg) -- China's economy, the world's third largest, may rebound 
this quarter as Premier Wen Jiabao's 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus 
package cushions the effects of the global recession.

Urban fixed-asset investment surged by almost a third in March and 
industrial-output growth accelerated, reports accompanying China's gross 
domestic product figures showed yesterday. First-quarter GDP grew 6.1 percent, 
the slowest pace in almost a decade, as exports slumped.

"The economy has gained significant momentum since February," said Sun 
Mingchun, an economist at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Hong Kong, who predicts the 
economy will expand 8 percent this year. "We still expect a V-shaped recovery."

A pickup in China will contribute "strongly" to growth in the rest of Asia by 
increasing demand for commodities and products from around the region, 
according to the World Bank. Wen has cautioned that while the economy is in 
better-than- expected shape, China is yet to establish a solid foundation for a 
recovery.

"China has bounced and I think it's very important," Barclays Plc President 
Robert Diamond said in an interview yesterday in New York. "The impact that 
that can have, if we're right and we see this continuation in stronger Asian 
countries, is pretty phenomenal."

UBS AG yesterday raised its estimate for economic growth this year to as much 
as 7.5 percent from 6.5 percent previously and Royal Bank of Scotland increased 
its estimate to 7 percent from 5 percent. Merrill Lynch expects second-quarter 
growth of 7.2 percent, climbing to 8 percent for 2009.

Newman's Optimism

"China got its stimulus plan started months ahead of the U.S. and it's really 
working," said Frank Newman, chairman of Shenzhen Development Bank, who served 
as a deputy secretary at the U.S. Treasury from 1994 to 1995. "We see a lot of 
it in action because we are financing it."

Economists have been increasing their forecasts since February. The median 
estimate of 15 surveyed by Bloomberg News before the release of yesterday's 
data was for 7.7 percent growth this year, up from 7.2 percent in February.

Nissan Motor Co. said its sales of passenger cars in China rose 36 percent in 
March from a year earlier as stimulus measures boosted confidence and attracted 
more buyers into showrooms. Anhui Conch Cement Co., China's biggest maker of 
the building material, said this month that sales volume jumped 15 percent in 
the first quarter from a year earlier.

Wen's Target

The government has targeted 8 percent economic growth for the year, a level 
deemed necessary to create enough jobs for its growing population.

The closure of thousands of factories has cost the jobs of millions of migrant 
workers, raising the risk of social unrest as China approaches the anniversary 
of the anti-government protests and crackdown in Tiananmen Square in June 1989.

While stimulus measures have started to produce results, China faces faltering 
export demand, industrial overcapacity, unemployment and weak private 
investment sentiment, Wen said yesterday. A rebound in industrial-output growth 
lacks momentum, the premier said.

"Growth may have bottomed out in the first quarter but with private sector and 
overseas demand still weak, China will not emerge from this downturn as rapidly 
as it went in," said Mark Williams, an economist with Capital Economics Ltd. in 
London.

Profits Decline

Profits earned by industrial companies fell 37 percent in the first two months 
of the year. Those earnings contributed four times as much to investment as 
bank lending and government spending combined last year, according to Williams.

"It seems wishful thinking to conclude, as many are, that China is on the cusp 
of a rapid rebound," he said.

China's expansion contrasts with recessions around the world. The Organization 
for Economic Cooperation and Development predicts 6.3 percent growth for China 
this year, compared with a 4 percent contraction in the U.S. and a 6.6 percent 
decline in Japan.

Wen's stimulus, plus a decision by the central bank to remove lending caps in 
November, helped new loans jump more than six times to 1.89 trillion yuan in 
March from a year earlier. The value of new investment projects started in the 
first quarter increased by 87 percent.

"March activity reports and bank-loan data show that the economy is gaining 
speed heading into the current quarter," said Frank Gong, head of China 
research at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Hong Kong. "Fixed investment is 
accelerating as major infrastructure projects break ground."

The Shanghai Composite Index of stocks has climbed 39 percent this year.


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