China GDP: Signs of a recovery to prove short-lived - Nomura

FXStreet (Bali) - China’s real GDP growth held stable at 7.3% y-o-y in Q4 2014 from Q3, in line with Nomura's expectations, although the bank notes that nascent signs of a recovery in December will prove short-lived.

Key Quotes

"China’s real GDP growth held stable at 7.3% y-o-y in Q4 2014 from Q3, in line with our expectation but slightly higher than consensus expectations of 7.2%. This takes full-year 2014 GDP growth to 7.4%, slightly below the official target of 7.5% (Consensus: 7.3%; Nomura: 7.4%)."

"As we expected, in the higher-frequency monthly data there are nascent signs of a recovery in December, but this will prove short-lived in our view. Industrial production growth rose to 7.9% y-o-y from 7.2% in November (Consensus: 7.4%; Nomura: 7.8%), as the disruptions from the factory shutdowns during the November APEC meeting have faded, and policy easing continues."

"Fixed asset investment growth edged down in December, to 15.7% y-o-y (ytd) from 15.8% in November (Consensus: 15.7%; Nomura: 15.6%). Slower investment growth was led by the property and infrastructure sectors: property investment growth slowed by 1.4 percentage points (pp) to 10.5% from 11.9%, while infrastructure investment growth (excluding electricity) declined by 0.3pp to 21.5%, from 21.8%. Manufacturing investment growth remained at 13.5% y-o-y (ytd) in December, unchanged from November."

"In contrast, retail sales strengthened, suggesting some progress in much-needed economic rebalancing from investment towards consumption. Nominal retail sales growth rose to 11.9% y-o-y in December from 11.7% in November (Consensus: 11.7%; Nomura: 12.0%). Excluding the price effect, the improvement in real retail sales growth was faster, at 11.5% y-o-y from 11.2% in November, perhaps buoyed by wealth effects from the strong equity market rally."

"We believe the economy will resume its downtrend after this short respite in December and continue to expect GDP growth to slow to 7.1% y-o-y in Q1 2015 given deep-rooted domestic challenges such as tighter controls over local government debt, the property market correction and deleveraging. For 2015, we maintain our GDP growth forecast of 6.8%."

"To achieve the media reported (albeit not yet official) growth target of “around 7.0%” for 2015, we believe the government will have to loosen policy further. We continue to expect one more interest rate cut in Q2 and one 50bp reserve requirement ratio cut in each quarter of 2015."

AUD/JPY uninspired by upbeat China GDP numbers

The Australian dollar edged lower versus the Japanese yen in the Asian morning, ignoring cheerful Chinese economic releases.
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