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China growth slows further in third quarter

China's gross domestic product expanded by 4.9% year-on-year in the third quarter
China's gross domestic product expanded by 4.9% year-on-year in the third quarter

China's economic growth slowed more than expected in the third quarter, official data showed today, as a crackdown on the property sector and a looming energy crisis began to bite.

After a swift coronavirus bounceback, recovery in the world's second-biggest economy is losing steam, with gross domestic product expanding 4.9% year-on-year, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said.

The NBS cited an "unstable and uneven" domestic rebound.

The reading was just short of the 5% tipped by analysts polled by AFP - and a sharp three percentage points off the second quarter performance.

NBS spokesman Fu Linghui told reporters today that "current international environment uncertainties are mounting and the domestic economic recovery is still unstable and uneven."

The economy grew only 0.2% from the previous three months, the weakest since a historic contraction in the first quarter last year.

"Growth was dragged down by a slowdown in real estate, amplified recently by spillover from Evergrande's travails," said Oxford Economics' head of Asia economics Louis Kuijs.

The struggles of property giant China Evergrande - which is drowning in more than $300 billion of debt - has battered sentiment among prospective buyers.

A government regulatory clampdown on the property sector - particularly the tightening of lending rules - has dealt a severe blow to a crucial driver of economic growth, with a knock-on effect for other parts industries including construction.

Investors are now keeping a worried eye on developments in the Evergrande saga on concerns it could have an impact on the wider economy.

However, China's central People's Bank of China at the weekend reassured that any financial sector fallout would be controllable, while governor Yi Gang told a seminar that authorities were watching for problems like default risks "due to mismanagement and breakneck expansion" at some firms.

Investors are keeping a worried eye on developments in the Evergrande saga

In a sign of the ongoing weakness in the property market, home sales by value slumped 16.9% on-year last month, following a 19.7% fall in August, AFP calculations based on official data showed.

Kuijs noted there was an "additional hit in September" from electricity shortages and production cuts caused by the strict implementation of climate and safety targets by local governments.

The added damage, he said, was visible in weaker industrial output, which slowed to 3.1% on-year.

Analysts at Fidelity International said that while property fears were the "epicentre of the shock", economic drag was being exacerbated by the power crunch, regional lockdowns and a "zero Covid" strategy that hit the services sector and disposable income.

"The only surprise in China's published GDP figures is that they have not come in lower," said Paras Anand, Fidelity's Asia-Pacific chief investment officer.

"Policy actions have been swift and have led to a collapse in global investor sentiment," he said, though adding tightening measures have likely peaked for now.

Kuijs believed that although electricity shortages and production cuts will be controlled in the fourth quarter, "the pending real estate downturn will continue to weigh substantially on growth".

GDP is still expected to grow around 8% for the whole year, PBoC governor Yi added.

The weak figure has added to speculation that officials will announce a cut in the amount of cash banks must keep in reserve, providing liquidity to the financial system, but they have to walk a fine line between supporting growth and keeping a lid on inflation.

But there were some bright spots, with retail sales rising 4.4% - up from 2.5% in August - as virus containment measures were eased in the country, which has imposed swift local lockdowns over a handful of cases.

And the urban unemployment rate dipped slightly at 4.9%.

Anxious officials have been concerned that unemployment could cause social unrest after the figure hit a five-year high in February last year.