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    China GDP Expands 11.2%




    Supporting Global Growth (Update3)

    By Nipa Piboontanasawat and Li Yanping

    Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) -- China's economy expanded more than 11 percent for the fourth straight quarter, supporting global growth as a recession looms in the U.S.

    Gross domestic product rose 11.2 percent in the three months ended Dec. 31, compared with 11.5 percent in the third quarter, the statistics bureau said in Beijing today.

    Inflation cooled to a 6.5 percent pace in December, still double the central bank's annual target, from an 11-year high of 6.9 percent in November. China, poised to become the biggest contributor to global growth this year, risks triggering a sudden slowdown by curbing lending to tame prices just as export demand weakens.

    ``Tightening too much when the U.S. is heading for a recession would be a double hit for the global economy,'' said Wang Qing, chief China economist at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong. ``Inflation is the key challenge.''

    The yuan traded at 7.2243 per dollar at 4:25 p.m. in Shanghai, from 7.2250 before the report. The yield on the treasury note due July 2010 fell 6 basis points to 3.86 percent.

    ``The economy still faces outstanding problems, including the risk of shifting from growing rapidly to overheating, and rising inflationary pressure,'' the statistics bureau said.

    The expansion was less than the 11.3 percent median estimate of 23 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

    Weaker Export Growth

    China raised interest rates six times last year and pushed banks' reserve ratios to a 20-year high to try to prevent cash from record trade surpluses fueling inflation and stock and property bubbles.

    Currency gains, which push up export prices, may become a more important tool for cooling the economy this year. The Federal Reserve's unexpected cut in its benchmark interest rate to 3.5 percent from 4.25 percent this week makes China less likely to raise its one-year lending rate beyond a nine-year high of 7.47 percent.

    The Fed's move, intended to stave off a recession, increases the chances of ``hot money'' flooding into China, Yu Yongding, director of the World Economics and Politics Institute in Beijing, said in Davos, Switzerland yesterday. Morgan Stanley cut yesterday its forecast for rate increases in China this year to none from two.

    Faster Currency Gains

    The yuan's gains versus the U.S. dollar accelerated to almost 3 percent in the fourth quarter, compared with a 7 percent pace for all of last year. It's up more than 14 percent since a fixed exchange rate ended in July 2005.

    Weaker U.S. demand and cuts to export incentives have already slowed growth in overseas shipments from China, a manufacturing base for Motorola Inc. mobile phones and Samsung Electronics Co. televisions. Exports rose at the slowest pace since 2002 in the fourth quarter.

    ``The yuan should be allowed to appreciate faster to deal with excess liquidity and inflation,'' Frank Gong, Hong Kong- based chief China economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co., said today. ``The pressure is building and the argument is gaining momentum within the Chinese government.''

    China's economy grew 11.4 percent in 2007 from a year earlier, the fastest pace in 13 years, to 24.7 trillion yuan ($3.4 trillion). The nation accounted for 17 percent of global growth, the same as the U.S., the United Nations estimates, and is poised to overtake Germany as the world's third-biggest economy this year.

    Food Stampedes

    Consumer prices advanced 4.8 percent in 2007 from a year earlier, a tripling of the pace in 2006, the statistics bureau said. Fitch Ratings forecast today a gain of more than 5 percent this year.

    Soaring costs have triggered stampedes at sales of discounted cooking oil and eggs, price controls on staple foods and memories of the unrest before the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and crackdown. The World Bank estimates 300 million Chinese people live in poverty.

    Inflation ``is quickly spreading from `just' an economic issue to a potential social instability threat,'' said Michael Kurtz, an equity strategist at Bear Stearns Ltd. in Hong Kong.

    Consumer prices rose more quickly in the countryside than in cities last year and the gap between rural and urban incomes widened. Urban disposable incomes climbed 17.2 percent from a year earlier to 13,786 yuan ($1,908), while rural earnings rose 15.4 percent to 4,140 yuan.

    Priming the Economy

    Factory and property investment in urban areas climbed 25.8 percent in 2007 from a year earlier, the statistics bureau said, up from the 24.5 percent pace in 2006. Industrial output rose 17.4 percent in December, up from 17.3 percent in November.

    A sudden slowdown may expose industrial overcapacity, leading to bad loans, job losses and deflation in an economy that the statistics bureau today described as ``not efficient enough'' and in need of ``further reform.''

    The government has the means to stimulate the economy if necessary. Tax revenue soared 31 percent last year to 4.94 trillion yuan and rising consumption is another shield. Retail sales climbed 20.2 percent in December from a year earlier, the fastest pace in at least nine years, partly because of inflation.

    ``China will still be well insulated at home in a U.S. recession,'' said Jonathan Anderson, global emerging markets economist at UBS AG in Hong Kong. He forecasts China's economy will grow 10 percent in 2008 and 9.5 percent in 2009 as domestic demand softens the effect of any export slowdown.

    The median estimate of 22 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News from Jan. 9 to 18 was for a 10.3 percent expansion this year.

    Link:
    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aaBYutTe6mbk&refer=home



    Now didn't I read somewhere that CVI are in the process of carving out a little niche in the Oil and Copper sectors? It looks like China will be needing both of those two commodities for some time yet.

    Cheers
    Nev
 
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