China’s Consumer Spending Shows Signs of Strong Rebound

Consumer spending in China has picked up rapidly in recent weeks, especially on eating out and travel, giving a boost to an economic recovery that’s become increasingly reliant on local demand.

(Bloomberg) — Consumer spending in China has picked up rapidly in recent weeks, especially on eating out and travel, giving a boost to an economic recovery that’s become increasingly reliant on local demand.

High-frequency indicators of spending in some sectors have shown double-digit growth from a year ago, while leading travel companies and retailers have reported a strong increase in sales so far this year.

China’s consumers are in focus after a government meeting this week suggested officials would avoid large stimulus through infrastructure investment or the property market — leaving household spending to drive demand in the world’s second-largest economy.

A consumer rebound will also help offset the slump in exports as economic growth in some of China’s key markets, like the US and Europe, weakens. After three years of on-off Covid restrictions, economists are betting consumers will help drive China’s growth to above 5% this year.

High-frequency data support anecdotal reports of packed restaurants in cities such as Beijing. A rolling 30-day average of restaurant revenues in major cities tracked by BigOne Lab, a China-based data provider, recorded 24% year-on-year growth in early February.  

Mobility indicators — such as road and subway travel — which tend to track consumer spending, also saw strong growth in recent weeks. An index of traffic congestion in China’s 15 largest cities compiled by BloombergNEF reached its highest reading in more than a year in February.

Investors remain cautious about the outlook, though, concerned by the lack of economic stimulus from officials at the National People’s Congress, the annual parliamentary gathering this week. The MSCI China Index erased all its gains for the year on Friday, dropping as much as 2.2%.  

Beijing has refrained from the direct cash handouts to consumers seen in other countries, betting that a recovery in hiring will lead households to spend more. 

Online retailer JD.com, whose shares slumped Thursday because of weak revenue last quarter, warned of a gradual rebound in sentiment. While social-contact related consumption, like restaurants and tourism, was recovering quickly, hiring by small and medium-sized companies “would take some time” to pass through to a full recovery in consumer confidence, the company’s Chief Executive Officer Xu Lei said on a conference call this week.

Retail Sales Rebound

After declining each month of the last quarter, retail sales for the first two months of the year — due to be released on March 15 — will likely show a year-on-year increase of 3.5%, according to economists in a Bloomberg survey.

That data probably won’t reflect recent strength in consumer spending, as it incorporates data from January, when China was hit by a wave of coronavirus infections that followed the government’s sudden ending of Covid restrictions.

A measure of Chinese consumer confidence by Morning Consult, a US consultancy, rose to the highest level in nine months in February.

“February should look much better than January,” especially in sectors such as car sales, said Larry Hu, head of China economics at Macquarie Group Ltd.

Car sales in China, a key component of retail sales, grew 10.4% in February from a year earlier, the China Passenger Vehicle Association said this week. The auto market is poised for a “period of steady growth,” the association’s Secretary General Cui Dongshu said.

Travel within China is picking up quickly, with the number of domestic flights in February up 17.2% on the same month in 2022, according to data from VariFlight Technology Co. 

Short-haul travel has already reached nearly double the levels before the pandemic, Jane Sun, chief executive of online travel agency Trip.com told investors this week. 

Some chains are already reporting better sales. Chinese budget retailer Miniso Group Holding Ltd. said on February 28 that sales in its physical stores have increased 20% year-on-year so far this quarter. 

Consumers are also flocking to cinemas, with the value of movie ticket sales in the first nine weeks of the year rose 11.8% from the same period in 2022 to reach over 14 billion yuan ($2 billion), according to latest data from Maoyan Entertainment.

While consumer price inflation slowed to a one-year low of 1% in February, that doesn’t mean the consumption recovery was soft, Citigroup Inc. economists led by Yu Xiangrong wrote in a note. 

“The rise in rent prices and solid domestic mobility data seem to suggest that recovery is in shape,” they said.

–With assistance from Danny Lee, Linda Lew and Fran Wang.

(Updates with stock market moves.)

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