China's upbeat industrial output, retail sales tempered by frail property

By Ellen Zhang and Joe Cash

BEIJING (Reuters) -China's factory output and retail sales beat expectations in the January-February period, marking a solid start for 2024 and offering some relief to policymakers even as weakness in the property sector remains a drag on the economy and confidence.

Monday's data join recent better-than-expected exports and consumer inflation indicators, providing an early boost to Beijing's hopes of reaching what analysts have described as an ambitious 5.0% GDP growth target for this year.

"China's activity data broadly stabilised at the start of the year. But there are still reasons to think some of the strength could be one-off," said Louise Loo, China economist at Oxford Economics.

Industrial output rose 7.0% in the first two months of the year, data released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed on Monday, above expectations for a 5.0% increase in a Reuters poll of analysts and faster than the 6.8% growth seen in December. It also marked the quickest growth in almost two years.

Retail sales, a gauge of consumption, rose 5.5%, slowing from a 7.4% increase in December but beating an expected 5.2% gain.

The eight-day Lunar New Year holiday in February saw a solid return of travel, which supported revenue of tourism and hospitality sectors. That also led to a 3% growth in oil refinery throughput to meet strong demand for transport fuels.

The NBS publishes combined January and February industrial output and retail sales data to smooth out distortions caused by the shifting timing of the Lunar New Year.

"Consumers were buoyed temporarily by festivities-related spending at this start of the year. In the absence of decisive consumption-related stimulus this year, we think it would be difficult to sustain a robust consumer spending pace this year," Oxford's Loo said.

Loo's cautious comments reflect broader consensus among China watchers that Beijing has its work cut out in achieving its 2024 economic growth target of "around 5.0%". While the goal was similar to 2023, analysts note last year had a lower base effect due to COVID curbs in 2022.

Investors were relieved by the better-than-expected data, with Asian shares firming and Chinese blue chips up 0.4%.

PROPERTY PAINS

A protracted crisis in the property sector, a key pillar of the economy, remains a major concern for policymakers, consumers and investors.

Monday's data offered little relief on that front with declines in property investment narrowing in January-February, but still far from levels of reaching stability.