The global zombie shuffles on

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My theory for global growth this year is that it will slow from last year and any acceleration will be difficult and halting. That’s because Europe has set course for perpetual recession via austerity and a credit crunch, the US looks headed for a slowdown on lousy income growth and China is going to have it’s version of a balance sheet shakeout as it suppresses house prices. As such I’ve been looking for signs of weak rebounds in the PMIs. And I’ve found them.

We know of China’s and Japan’s manufacturing zombies, as well as the slowdown in growth in last night’s US ISM. Now today we can add the export bell weathers of South Korea and Taiwan. First to the ROK:

Business conditions in the South Korean manufacturing sector improved for the first time since July 2011 during February. This was highlighted by the HSBC South Korea Manufacturing PMI® posting 50.7, up from January’s reading of 49.2. Nonetheless, the latest figure pointed to only a marginal rate of growth.

South Korean manufacturers reported an increase in new business received during February, ending a six-month sequence of contraction. Nonetheless, the expansion was only marginal. Similarly, new export orders increased, but only slightly. Panellists commented that ongoing fragile economic conditions and strong competition for new business had limited the extent to which overall new work intakes increased.

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So, a fairly subdued bounce. Meanwhile, in Taiwan the news was similar with a bit more upside:

The HSBC Taiwan PMI™ – a composite indicator designed to provide a single-figure snap-shot of the health of the manufacturing sector – posted 52.7 in February, up from 48.9 in January, and signalled modest growth of the sector. Furthermore, the expansion ended an eight-month period of deteriorating operating conditions.

Manufacturers in Taiwan reported a rise in new business during February, the first such increase since May 2011. Increasing almost seven points, the seasonally adjusted New Orders Index pointed to solid growth of new work intakes. Similarly, an expansion of new export business was also registered. Panellists commented that increased demand, both at home and overseas, had contributed to the rise in overall new orders. Export markets particularly noted to have shown an improvement were China, Europe and the US.

Finally, now we’ve done the rounds of the global PMIs once more, we can look at the J.P.Morgan Global PMI:

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The JPMorgan Global Manufacturing PMI broadly held its ground at 51.1 in February, little-changed from 51.3 in January, to signal an improvement in operating conditions for the third straight month. Levels of output, new orders and employment all moved higher.  

So, as you can see, not going anywhere fast and a glance at the internals is no more encouraging with forward pointing indicators weaker than headline:

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We’ve averted a banking crisis in the US, more recently one in Europe, and probably one in China right now. My guess is we’ll now pay with slow growth. Everywhere.

Taiwan

South Korea

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About the author
David Llewellyn-Smith is Chief Strategist at the MB Fund and MB Super. David is the founding publisher and editor of MacroBusiness and was the founding publisher and global economy editor of The Diplomat, the Asia Pacific’s leading geo-politics and economics portal. He is also a former gold trader and economic commentator at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC and Business Spectator. He is the co-author of The Great Crash of 2008 with Ross Garnaut and was the editor of the second Garnaut Climate Change Review.