China Lunar New Year retail sales rise, but pace slowest in years
* Holiday sales help lift Chinese consumer stocks
* But growth pace dropped below that for 2018 holiday sales
* Nomura: Weak rate 'does not bode well' for overall retail
growth
(Adds analyst quotes, context)
SHANGHAI, Feb 11 (Reuters) - Sales by China's retail
businesses during the Lunar New Year holiday rose 8.5 percent
from a year earlier, pushing up consumer stocks on Monday, but a
cooler pace of growth added to evidence the economy is slowing.
The Ministry of Commerce, in a notice on its website late
Sunday, said retail and catering enterprises had revenue of over
1 trillion yuan ($148.3 billion) between Feb. 4-10 during the
holiday.
It attributed the increase to stronger sales of new-year
gifts, traditional foods, electronic products and speciality
products.
The holiday is considered a barometer for Chinese private
consumption as it is the time for family reunions as well as
gift-giving.
China's economic growth slowed to 6.6 percent in 2018 -- the
weakest pace in 28 years -- and is expected to cool further this
year before government growth boosting measures stabilise
activity from mid-year.
On Monday, when China's financial markets reopened, the
blue-chip index rose 1.8 percent, and the consumer
staple index surged 4 percent.
Liquor maker Kweichow Moutai Co Ltd jumped
nearly 5 pct while home appliance makers Gree Electric
Appliances and Midea Group closed up 2.7
and 4.1 percent, respectively.
But the growth rate for holiday retail sales fell to its
lowest since at least 2011. During the 2018's Lunar New Year
holidays, the annual increase was 10.2 percent.
Nomura analysts said the fresh data indicated how consumers
were further tightening their belts, and noted that it was the
first time Lunar New Year retail sales recorded single-digit
growth since the government started publishing data in 2005.
"Weak consumption during the Lunar New Year holidays in 2019
does not bode well for overall retail sales growth," Nomura said
in a note on Monday.
Domestic tourism during the new year break generated revenue
of 513.9 billion yuan, up 8.2 percent on the year, with the
number of trips rising 7.6 percent to 415 million, the official
Xinhua news agency said on Sunday.
SLOWING GROWTH
Domestic consumers were the main engine behind China's
economic expansion last year as other growth drivers such as
manufacturing and trade faltered, but their spending has already
showed signs of softening.
Retail sales grew the least in 2018 in 15 years, slowing
markedly in the final quarter of the year, as incomes increased
at a slacker pace while the cost of living rose. Sales in the
world's biggest auto market shrank for the first time since the
1990s.
The topic of how much people spent over the holiday was
widely discussed on Chinese social media, with some netizens
saying they stayed home to save money while others said they
borrowed money to celebrate.
"My hard work that went into achieving one year of savings
is no match for the short Spring Festival holiday," said a post
on Weibo that garnered over 5,000 comments.
($1 = 6.7426 yuan)
(Reporting by Brenda Goh in Shanghai; Additional reporting by
David Stanway, the Shanghai Newsroom and Ryan Woo in Beijing;
Editing by Richard Borsuk)
First Published: 2019-02-11 02:41:45
Updated 2019-02-11 12:21:51
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