Deflationary pressures in China's industries eased further in May, while consumer price gains continued to be subdued enough to offer the central bank scope for more easing if needed.
Amid a drive by the Communist party leadership to cut excess capacity, producer prices fell 2.8 per cent, the least since late 2014 and less than the 3.2 per cent decline economists had estimated in a Bloomberg survey. The consumer price index rose 2 per cent from a year earlier, less than the median forecast of 2.2 per cent.
Easing factory-gate deflation is the latest signal of stabilisation after more than four years of falling producer prices. Tepid consumer price gains may allow the People's Bank of China, which has kept interest rates at a record low since October, room to add further stimulus in the short term to help prop up growth.
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"The deflationary threat has substantially diminished," said Raymond Yeung, a senior economist with Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd in Hong Kong. "Domestic demand has stabilised so we don't see a strong upward pressure either. We still think the PBOC will remain moderately accommodative."
The National Bureau of Statistics released the price data on Thursday, when markets in China and Hong Kong were closed for the Dragon Boat Festival holiday.
Mining and raw-materials producer prices slumped less in May than the previous month, though still recorded the biggest declines. Mining producer goods fell 9.6 per cent last month, versus a 13 per cent drop in April, while raw-material producer prices fell 7.2 per cent, less than the prior month's 7.7 per cent decline, the statistics bureau reported.
"Firmer producer prices reflect a combination of factors," Bloomberg Intelligence economists Tom Orlik and Fielding Chen wrote in a note. "Commodity prices are a big part of the picture, with oil and iron ore both down less sharply than in 2015. So, too, is slightly more resilient domestic demand. Capacity utilisation remains extremely low in historical comparison, but has ticked up over the last few months."
Producer prices haven't risen since January 2012. Having an end in sight for PPI deflation may be welcome news for policy makers, who are striving to keep economic growth above 6.5 per cent this year while keeping a lid on debt and cutting excess capacity in industries including coal and steel. The first quarter's 6.7 per cent expansion may slow to 6.6 per cent in the second quarter and 6.5 per cent in the third, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg.
For consumers, vegetable prices dropped 21.5 per cent in May from April, while pork and gas prices rose, the statistics bureau said. Compared with a year earlier, gains in food prices slowed to 5.9 per cent from 7.4 per cent in April. Non-food prices rose 1.1 per cent.
"CPI inflation is tame," said Shen Jianguang, chief Asia economist at Mizuho Securities Asia Ltd in Hong Kong. "This is good for the PBOC to maintain the current pace of monetary easing."
PBOC economists raised their forecast for full-year CPI to 2.4 per cent from 1.7 per cent in a working paper published Wednesday, citing increasing commodities and food costs, as well as higher rents stemming from surging home prices in some cities. They kept their PPI estimate unchanged for a decline of 1.8 per cent.