China ETFs To Watch As Economic Growth Remains Robust

The world's second-largest economy exhibited strong performance in the first quarter. Strength in consumer drove expansion and overshadowed the troubles facing the economy. 

However, this was not enough to convince pessimists of a brighter future, as they questioned the impact of the trade friction and high debt on the economy.

Into the Headlines

China's economy grew 6.8% year over year in the first quarter, slightly slower than 6.9% reported in 2017. Moreover, first-quarter data was above the 2018 target of 6.5%. 

Exports led the way for China's economic expansion in the quarter, as it grew 14% in the first quarter compared with 8% in the prior-year quarter. However, the outlook for this space remains cloudy, owing to increasing trade tensions with the United States.

Producer prices slowed to a 17-month low of 3.1% on a year-over-year basis in March compared with 3.7% in the previous month. Moreover, consumer prices increased 2.1% in March compared with 2.9% in February. The numbers in February seemed to be distorted, owing to a one-off increase in demand due to Lunar New Year celebrations. 

Although consumer spending increased 9.8% in the quarter, it was below the 10.0% growth registered in the year-ago quarter. Moreover, in roads, airports and other infrastructure slowed to 13.0% compared with 23.5% in the year-ago quarter. The relative weakness in these numbers support the prediction of a slowdown in the coming months. 

“March data point to nascent signs of a growth slowdown underway, led by old economy sectors,” per a Bloomberg article, citing a statement by Rob Subbaraman, chief economist for Asia ex-Japan at Nomura Holdings Inc.

Risks Involved

From a domestic perspective, the Chinese government is aiming to crack down on high debt levels and pollution intensive industries to transform the manufacturing oriented economy to a more balanced one. President Xi Jinping's aim to shift the economic growth drivers to quality instead of just quantity by cracking down on pollution might initially lead to a gradual slowdown in economic growth.

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