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Asia today
The weekend release of China PMI data showed a small decline in the manufacturing PMI to 51.3 from 51.9, and a bigger decline in the non-manufacturing PMI to 52.4 from 55.7. Looming Lunar New Year spending may be distorting the current non-manufacturing PMI, but there may also be some spillover from the recent lockdowns associated with the return of some Covid-19 infections in and around Beijing in recent weeks. Iris Pang writes more about this in her piece this morning.
Other PMI data is due out across the region this morning, including the Caixin China figures. Some data has already been released, though there is a fairly mixed picture emerging, with some, S Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia, and the Philippines showing a firmer manufacturing recovery, others, Malaysia, Japan, Thailand pointing to a renewed slowdown.
S Korea has also already released trade data for January, which showed double-digit growth rates being maintained, and some slight improvement in import data too, which could be both a reflection of parts imports for future export or firming domestic demand. Both of which would be good outcomes.
Nicky Mapa has this to say about Indonesian inflation due later today “Indonesia reports CPI inflation today with market analysts expecting price pressures to remain subdued with inflation set to fall below the central bank’s 2-4% inflation target again. Despite a slight uptick to close out 2020, price pressures have been relatively weak given the current economic situation with stricter lockdowns reinstated in Java and Bali. Bank Indonesia (BI) has flagged the possibility of an uptick in prices later in the year but inflation will likely remain within its target range, which would leave the door open for further rate cuts by BI in the near term should IDR stabilize”.
And Prakash Sakpal notes the following on India’s scheduled budget and other matters: “It’s a big policy week in India. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman today unveils the Budget for Fiscal Year (FY) 2021-22 (starts in April 2021). Released ahead of the Budget last Friday, the government’s annual Economic Survey for FY2020-21 projects a -7.7% GDP contraction in the current financial year and as much as an 11% bounce in FY2021-22, both of which appear optimistic (ING forecasts -9.8% and +8.1% respectively). Supporting such a V-shaped recovery, fiscal policy ought to be expansionary. However, after a record budget deficit estimated to be over 7% of GDP in the current financial year, we believe some consolidation is in order as also reflected by news of possible hikes in import duties. It’s going to be a balancing act of supporting economic recovery without risking any sovereign rating downgrades or dampening investors’ confidence in the government’s economic management. That said, we look for a planned reduction in the deficit under 6% of GDP in FY2021-22. The Reserve Bank of India also meets on Friday, 5 February. We expect it to ignore the return of inflation back to the 2-6% policy target (4.6% in December) and leave the rate policy on hold, which is also a consensus view.
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