China Consumer Inflation Softens
July 10 2016 - 8:20PM
Dow Jones News
SHANGHAI—Consumer inflation in China decelerated in June as food
prices increased at a slower pace, giving the central bank more
leeway to ease monetary policy in the world's second-largest
economy.
The National Bureau of Statistics reported Sunday that China's
Consumer Price Index rose 1.9% in June from a year earlier, a
little less than May's 2.0% increase. The key inflation reading
slightly exceeded a median 1.8% gain forecast by 15 economists
surveyed by The Wall Street Journal.
China's Producer Price Index declined 2.6% year-over-year in
June, which was a little weaker than expected, compared with a 2.8%
drop in May. The index has lingered in deflationary territory for
more than four years, although it has decelerated less rapidly in
recent months.
A monthly CPI reading well below Beijing's 2016 target ceiling
of 3% gives policy makers more leeway to pursue easy-money policies
amid a continued economic slowdown.
"Inflation is still soft. The problem is that demand remains
quite weak," said Commerzbank AG economist Zhou Hao. "They'll
definitely be easing policy ahead." Mr. Zhou said he expects both
an interest-rate cut and a reduction in required bank reserves in
coming months as China works to achieve its 2016 target growth rate
of 6.5% to 7%.
China on Friday will report second-quarter growth. Economists
expect it will match or come in below the first quarter's 6.7%
rate, which was already the weakest pace since the global financial
crisis.
According to the statistics bureau, vegetable, fruit and pork
prices rose in June at a slower pace, helping to reverse recent
upward momentum in consumer prices.
"The fear earlier this year about runaway inflation has largely
gone," said Macquarie Securities Group in a research note.
But sharp earlier increases have left some consumers feeling
pinched. Zhao Guilan, a 41-year old fruit and vegetable seller in
Beijing, said the price of pork at around 23 yuan ($3.44) per 500
grams is nearly double its year-ago level, leading her to spend
more carefully. "We rarely eat out these days," she said. "Going to
a restaurant just costs extra money."
Economists also caution that torrential rains in southern China
in recent weeks could boost vegetable prices at a faster pace in
coming months. According to Bank of Communications Ltd., food
accounts for about a third of China's CPI calculation.
Prices at the factory gate fell less rapidly in June as copper,
aluminum and other global commodity prices rose or stabilized.
"The decline in the PPI can continue to narrow to nearly zero if
commodities stay stable," said Gavekal Research in a report.
Less robust PPI deflation also could provide some relief to
industrial companies that have seen their cash flow squeezed by
rapidly falling prices, said ING Groep in a note, adding that this
reduces the likelihood of a "Korea 1998-style banking crisis."
But ING added that it doesn't "lessen the urgency of sustaining
infrastructure and housing investment-led growth" to offset the
drag from high debt levels and bad loans. Some economists also
caution that the possibility of Britain leaving the European Union
could set off another round of global commodity price declines that
end up fueling deflationary pressure in China.
"We're seeing no big improvement in the Chinese economy," said
Mr. Zhou with Commerzbank. "If it's not getting worse right now,
that's a good thing."
Liyan Qi contributed to this article.
Write to Mark Magnier at mark.magnier@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 10, 2016 21:05 ET (01:05 GMT)
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