Investing.com-- Chinese manufacturing activity unexpectedly rose back into expansion in November, a private survey showed on Friday, as a mild increase in domestic demand helped offset a persistent decline in overseas orders.
The Caixin manufacturing purchasing managers index (PMI) rose to 50.7 in November, beating expectations for a reading of 49.3, and improving sharply from the 49.6 seen in the prior month.
A reading above 50 indicates expansion, with the Caixin survey now coming back into growth after an unexpected contraction in October.
The reading was in contrast to government PMI data released on Thursday, which showed a bigger-than-expected decline in manufacturing activity. But the Caixin survey differs from the government survey in its scope, wherein it focuses more on smaller, private enterprises, as opposed to the bigger, state-run enterprises covered by the official survey. Investors usually use both surveys to get a broader picture of the Chinese economy.
Still, Friday’s data indicated some improvement in China’s biggest economic engines, especially as Beijing increased its pace of liquidity injections and supportive measures over the past month. An improvement in local new business orders was a key point of support for manufacturing activity, helping slightly offset a continued decline in overseas demand.
“The macro economy has been recovering. Household consumption, industrial production and market expectations have all improved. But domestic and foreign demand is still insufficient, employment pressure remains high, and economic recovery has yet to find solid footing,” Wang Zhe, senior economist at Caixin Insight Group wrote in a note.
Zhe noted that employment conditions in the manufacturing
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