China's retail sales of consumer goods went up 4.9 percent year on year in October, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed Monday.
The country's retail sales of consumer goods totaled around 4.05 trillion yuan (about 633 billion U.S. dollars) in October, according to the NBS.
The figure increased by 9.4 percent from October 2019, putting the two-year average growth at 4.6 percent, said the NBS.
In the January-October period, China's total retail sales of consumer goods stood at 35.85 trillion yuan, up 14.9 percent year on year.
The October figure reflects resilience in China's consumption recovery, highlighting a steady rebound in the sales of consumer goods, as well as the strong internal impetus and new consumption patterns supporting the growth, said NBS spokesperson Fu Linghui.
In the first 10 months, China's online retail sales rose 17.4 percent year on year to reach about 10.38 trillion yuan, NBS data showed.
But, the complex and rapidly changing international environment, the raging pandemic and the sporadic resurgence of domestic COVID-19 cases are still restricting consumption activities that require contact, Fu cautioned.
He, however, expressed confidence that China's economic recovery, employment expansion, residential income increase and improvement in the social safety net will sustain growth in consumption.
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Industrial output rose 3.5% in October from a year earlier, while retail sales growth accelerated to 4.9%, beating economists' forecasts. Growth in fixed-asset investment eased to 6.1% in the first 10 months of the year, with tighter curbs on the real estate market continuing to weigh on the sector. The surveyed jobless rate was steady at 4.9%.
The better-than-expected numbers provides some relief after the economy's momentum weakened in recent months on the back of energy shortages, Beijing's reining in of the property market and widespread Covid-19 outbreaks. However, the recovery remains uncertain, given the outsized contribution of real estate -- at 25% of GDP when related industries are included -- and the disruption to travel and spending from the government's stringent virus restrictions.
"Overall there is some improvement, especially in the mining and utility industries," said Lu Ting, chief China economist for Nomura Holdings Inc. "But other areas actually didn't improve substantially and remain at low levels, especially for investments."Lu said rising prices and consumers panic-buying goods at the beginning of October may have contributed to the pickup in retail spending last month. When adjusting for inflation, retail sales rose 1.9% in October from a year ago, a slower pace than in September.
Electricity shortages, which had been a key constraint on industrial output in September, eased last month, with power supply climbing 11.1% in October from a year earlier.
The property slump continued to weigh on output, with production of construction-related commodities, such as steel and iron, contracting. Investment in new construction declined for a fourth month, dropping 7.7% from a year ago.
Separate data from the NBS showed home prices fell 0.25% in October from the previous month, a bigger decline than in September. The benchmark stock index was about 0.3% lower, with property developers declining more after the news on falling home prices.
The NBS said in a statement the economy "was generally stable and maintained the trend of recovery." It warned that the "international environment is still complicated and severe with many unstable and uncertain factors."
Iris Pang, chief economist for Greater China at ING Groep NV, said rising Covid cases will continue to weigh on the economy's outlook.
"The potential for sudden strict domestic travel restrictions means that people are still very hesitant about travel," she said. "This could continue into the coming Chinese New Year holiday in February 2022."
The slowdown has put the spotlight back on policy makers, who have so far taken a muted approach to stimulus, preferring to "fine-tune" policies rather than flood the economy with support. In line with that approach, the People's Bank of China refrained from injecting additional cash into the financial system in its monthly liquidity operation on Monday, rolling over all the loans maturing instead.Most economists expect Beijing to stick with the property curbs, resulting in weaker growth into next year. GDP growth is expected to slow to 3.5% in the final quarter, reach 8% for the full year and weaken to 5.4% in 2022, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists.
"Growth will likely weaken in the rest of this year," said Zhang Zhiwei, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management Ltd. "The slowdown in the property sector continued, which is the key risk for the macro outlook in the next few quarters."
— With assistance by James Mayger, Lin Zhu, Yujing Liu, Lianting Tu, and Tom Hancock