China manufacturing data picks up in July: HSBC

  • Video of man hitting worker in office goes viral

    Video of man hitting worker in office goes viral

    Video of man hitting worker in office goes viral

    A clip of a man hitting an office worker – who appears to be an employee under his supervision - has gone viral in Singapore, sparking outrage and calls for the authorities to step in.

  • Former president Nathan urges more Singaporeans to volunteer

    Former president Nathan urges more Singaporeans to volunteer

    Former president Nathan urges more Singaporeans to volunteer

    “People need to feel compassion,” says former president of Singapore, S R Nathan. “Problems will always be there. You can always throw money but that will not be the solution," he said as he urged more Singaporeans to give of their time and effort as volunteers to help those in need.

  • Teo Ho Pin presses WP's Sylvia Lim for answers

    Teo Ho Pin presses WP's Sylvia Lim for answers

    Teo Ho Pin presses WP's Sylvia Lim for answers

    Worker's Party Chairman Sylvia Lim has challenged Dr Teo Ho Pin to make a report to the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB) if he believes that the WP had mismanaged the Town Council.

  • Singapore kindness mascot Singa the Lion quits

    Singapore kindness mascot Singa the Lion quits

    Singapore kindness mascot Singa the Lion quits

    Almost every Singaporean recalls growing up with Singa the Lion reminding you to let people exit the train first before boarding and to give up your seat to the disabled or elderly. But after 30 years of service, Singa says he needs “a long break” as he’s “just too tired to continue facing an increasingly angry and disagreeable society.”

  • Singapore appoints Bernd Stange as national football coach

    Singapore appoints Bernd Stange as national football coach

    Singapore appoints Bernd Stange as national football coach

    Former East Germany national coach Bernd Stange has been named as Singapore's new national team coach.

China's manufacturing activity contracted at its slowest pace in five months in July, an independent survey showed Tuesday, indicating that Beijing's easing measures were beginning to take effect.

Preliminary figures from HSBC's closely watched purchasing managers' index (PMI), which gauges nationwide manufacturing activity, hit a five-month high of 49.5 in July, the British banking giant said in a statement.

A PMI reading above 50 indicates expansion, while a reading below 50 points to contraction.

HSBC said the reading, which was higher than the 48.2 that HSBC recorded in June, indicated that government measures to boost economic growth were working.

"That said, the below-50 July reading implied demand still remaining weak and employment under increasing pressure," Qu Hongbin, a Hong Kong-based economist with HSBC, said in the statement.

"This calls for more easing efforts to support growth and jobs."

China's gross domestic product fell to a more than three year low of 7.6 percent in the second quarter, prompting the central bank to take the rare step of slashing interest rates for the second time since early June.

It has also cut the amount of money banks must keep in reserve, aimed at stimulating lending, three times since December.

Chinese leaders have vowed to take further measures, and Premier Wen Jiabao has called stabilising economic growth the government's top priority.

Qu the economist said falling inflation gave Beijing leeway to introduce more policies to bolster growth, with "meaningful improvement" of the world's second-largest economy expected in the coming months.

China's consumer price index, the main measure of inflation, slowed to 2.2 percent in June, its lowest level in 29 months, according to official data.

Zhang Zhiwei, an economist with Nomura International Limited in Hong Kong, said the July PMI reading reinforced signs that the Chinese economy bottomed out in the second quarter and will rebound in the July-September period.

"We continue to expect policy easing to pick up," he said in a research note.

Chinese shares edged up modestly on Tuesday as investors awaited other economic data due to be released early next month to further confirm the recovery.

The Shanghai Composite Index closed up 5.19 points to 2,146.59 on turnover of 46.7 billion yuan ($7.3 billion).

HSBC will issue the final reading of July PMI on August 1.

  • Best and worst sugar substitutes Fri, May 17, 2013

    Sugar has earned a bad reputation for being bad for your heart, your brain and your waistline. Because of this, there have been many attempts to market sugar substitutes. Some are useful, but some More »

  • Why go through a preventive double mastectomy? Fri, May 17, 2013

    Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie announced she has had both her breasts removed in February to reduce her high genetic risk of breast cancer. The surgery, called double mastectomy, brought down her More »

  • Top 8 lucrative routes for taxi drivers Fri, May 17, 2013

    For a taxi driver, a key survival skill is knowing where to find customers. As far as possible, a driver should know the routes at his or her fingertips. Hence, in this 6th instalment of Taxi Talks, More »

Loading...
  • Teo Ho Pin presses WP's Sylvia Lim for answers

    Teo Ho Pin presses WP's Sylvia Lim for answers

    Teo Ho Pin presses WP's Sylvia Lim for answers

    Worker's Party Chairman Sylvia Lim has challenged Dr Teo Ho Pin to make a report to the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB) if he believes that the WP had mismanaged the Town Council.

  • Video of man hitting worker in office goes viral

    Video of man hitting worker in office goes viral

    Video of man hitting worker in office goes viral

    A clip of a man hitting an office worker – who appears to be an employee under his supervision - has gone viral in Singapore, sparking outrage and calls for the authorities to step in.

  • Penitent Romanian hacker aims to protect world's ATMs

    Penitent Romanian hacker aims to protect world's ATMs

    Penitent Romanian hacker aims to protect world's ATMs

    By Radu Marinas VASLUI, Romania (Reuters) - Valentin Boanta, sitting in his jail cell, proudly explains the device he has invented which, he says, could make the world's ATMs impregnable even to tech-savvy criminals like himself. Boanta, 33, is six months into a five-year sentence for supplying gadgets an organized crime gang used to conceal ATM skimmers, which can copy data from an unsuspecting ATM user's card so a clone can be created. He said he had started to make the devices for the sheer excitement of it and denies ever planning to use them himself, saying he only sold them to others. ...