China’s factory-gate prices rose in March for the first time in more than three years, signalling a return of price pressure in the industrial sector even as consumer inflation lost momentum and domestic demand remained soft.
Data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed on Friday that the producer price index rose 0.5% from a year earlier, beating expectations for a 0.4% increase in a Reuters poll.
The reading ended a 41-month run of contraction in producer prices and marked a notable turn after a prolonged period of deflation at the factory gate.
By contrast, the consumer price index rose 1% from a year earlier, slowing from 1.3% in February and coming in below economists’ expectations for a 1.2% gain.
On a monthly basis, consumer prices fell 0.7%, a sharper drop than the expected 0.2% decline and a reversal from February’s 1% increase.
The split between rising factory-gate prices and softer consumer inflation suggests that cost pressures are building in parts of the production chain, while demand at the household level remains more subdued.
That divergence is likely to sharpen scrutiny of how much pricing power companies can retain if consumers remain cautious.
Factory-gate prices turn positive
The rebound in producer prices is significant because it breaks one of the longest stretches of factory-gate deflation in recent years.
A positive PPI reading can point to firmer industrial activity, higher commodity costs or improving pricing conditions for manufacturers.
March’s 0.5% increase was modest, but it still marked a clear shift from the persistent weakness seen over the past three years.
The figure also came in slightly above market expectations, suggesting price pressure in the industrial economy may be recovering faster than analysts had anticipated.
For manufacturers, the move could provide some support to margins if higher prices are sustained.
But it may also reflect rising input and import costs, leaving companies exposed if end demand fails to keep pace.
Consumer inflation loses momentum
While producer prices improved, the consumer side of the inflation picture was notably softer.
Annual CPI slowed to 1%, extending a recent cooling trend from February’s stronger reading and underscoring the uneven nature of the recovery in domestic demand.
The monthly decline was especially striking. Consumer prices fell 0.7% in March, the steepest monthly drop in three years, according to the data.
That compared with a 1% increase in February and was far weaker than the consensus forecast for a 0.2% decline.
Data released alongside the headline figures showed non-food CPI fell 0.8% on the month, while food prices dropped 0.9%.
The breadth of those declines suggests the softness was not confined to one category and may reflect broader caution among households.
Divergence clouds the outlook
The contrast between producer and consumer prices leaves policymakers and investors with a more complicated inflation picture.
On one hand, factory-gate prices turning positive may indicate that industrial price pressure is returning.
On the other, weaker CPI points to limited pass-through to consumers and a still-fragile demand backdrop.
That matters because the inflation mix can shape expectations for growth, profits and policy support.
If input costs continue to rise while consumer demand stays soft, companies may face greater pressure on margins.
For economists, the March data offer an important read on the balance between external cost pressures and underlying domestic demand.
For now, the message from the data is mixed: China’s industrial sector is seeing firmer price momentum, but households are not yet showing the same strength.
The post Why did China’s factory-gate prices turn positive after 3 years? appeared first on Invezz
