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More Questions China's Recovery

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

On FT Alphaville: Izabella Kaminska writes about China’s fake recovery

  • Whatever the manufacturing indices may be telling us, the commodity picture tells a somewhat different story. Yes buying of copper and other materials is up in April. But how those materials are actually being used is far from clear.

    One major economic indicator of China’s rampant growth has always been its growing appetite for crude and petroleum products. And it is here that the picture seems to contradict the argument that a sustained recovery is already beginning.

    CBI China, an authoritative source on Chinese commodity import and exports, shows for one that China is suffering from the same product
    overhang affecting the rest of the world, and mainly the US.

    Gasoline demand may still be firm, but gasoil (aka heating oil) demand — mostly used in industry — fell 12.6 per cent in the first quarter of 2009.
    Prospects for May, meanwhile, look equally weak.

    As CBI write (emphasis ours):

    Propsects for May:
    Most players expected bearish gasoil market in may amid weaker speculative demand and increased supplies. Speculative demand will probably plunge if the market gains no more support in may, but end-user demand is not likely to grow much amid gloomy economy. Meanwhile, oversupply will probably remain as supplies grow.
    When supplies from PetroChina and Sinopec are not seen to change, CNOOC Huizhou refinery is estimated to supply 200,000-300,000mt of gasoil to East and South China per month. Without much support from international crude, PetroChina and Sinopec may cut prices to promote sales in some regions, where they failed to fulfill their sales targets in April.

    There is little possibility for China to import any gasoil in May in view of negative import margin and weak demand from the domestic market. Meanwhile, Sinopec’s and PetroChina’s gasoil exports may be little changed from the previous three months, about 200,000-300,000mt altogether.

    Sean Corrigan, chief investment strategist over at Diapason Commodities, also points to a continuing slide in China’s overall electricity consumption:

    Indeed, as we have noted before, China’s own electric power generation which at a 13.4% CAR had closely tracked industrial output growth of 13.7% for a decade - dipped again in April to leave the total for the last seven months a sizeable 8.5% below that for the equivalent period in 2007-08.

    Power consumption, of course, can be seen as a good proxy for the overall state of the manufacturing sector and ties neatly with the above reports of continued collapse in industrial demand for gasoil — particularly in the industrious south of the country.

    All in all, very contradictory to the view that a recovery has really begun.

Also see: Power generation in China down 3.55% in April - Xinhua

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