China Manufacturing Picks Up Steam in September
By wchung | 15 Jun, 2026
Growth in Chinese manufacturing picked up pace in September, a survey showed Friday, adding to evidence that China’s economic recovery remains on track.
The state-affiliated China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said its purchasing managers index, or PMI, rose to 53.8 in September from 51.7 in August. Numbers above 50 show manufacturing activity expanding.
The index, an indicator of future manufacturing trends, has remained above 50 for 19 straight months after slowing in late 2008 and early 2009. September’s index was the highest since it hit 53.9 in May.
China’s growth cooled in the second quarter to 10.3 percent from 11.9 percent in the first quarter and is expected to drift lower. Some forecasters have cut their growth outlook for this year, though they say China easily can meet the government’s target of 8 percent.
On Wednesday a competing index, the HSBC China Manufacturing PMI — a seasonally adjusted index designed to measure the performance of the manufacturing economy — rose in September to 52.9 from 51.9 in August. Numbers above 50 show manufacturing activity expanding.
The China Federation’s survey showed that nine of 11 areas rose in September compared with the previous month, including production and new orders. New export orders climbed marginally to 52.8 from 52.2, showing steady external demand.
The two areas that fell below the expansionary mark of 50 were stocks of purchases and stocks of finished goods.
The subindex for input prices rose, which could show inflationary pressures. The China Federation said price increases were strong for food products.
BEIJING (AP)
Recent Articles
- California Congressman Dave Min Presses Trump on “Pay-To-Play” Pardons
- China's Heavy Truck Electrification to Hit Diesel Demand
- Trump Push into Highly Dangerous Plutonium Unlikely to Fix US Nuclear Fuel Crunch
- India's May Wholesale Price Inflation Rose to 9.68% on Fuel-Cost Surge
- Tesla Presented Misleading ‘Full Self-Driving’ Safety Data to European Regulators
- Deal Includes Release of $25 Billion in Frozen Assets, US-Funded Reconstruction
- Fox Strikes $22 Billion Deal for Roku to Aid Streaming Shift
- Nvidia to Raise $20 Billion in First Corporate Bond Sale in Five Years
- Israel Remains Wild Card As Iran, US Seek Peace
- US Homebuilder Sentiment Falls in June Amid Rising Costs
