Manufacturing momentum kicked back in December. China's factory activity just crossed the 50-mark on the PMI scale—the first time since April—signaling genuine demand revival and stabilizing exports. When the purchasing managers' index bounces this way, it typically reflects real ordering activity picking up, which matters for commodity prices, global supply chains, and ultimately how much liquidity flows into different asset classes. The gap from April to now wasn't trivial; months of weakness meant plenty of uncertainty about whether the slowdown would deepen or reverse. This data point suggests the slowdown's hitting a floor. Not explosive growth, but stabilization beats continued contraction every time. Worth watching how this momentum carries into January and whether other major economies show similar patterns.
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MetaMisfit
· 13h ago
China's manufacturing rebound, PMI breaks 50. Here we go again, let's see how long it can last.
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¯\_(ツ)_/¯
· 13h ago
PMI has broken above 50, and China's industrial sector has finally shown some improvement. However, this is just a step back from the edge of the cliff, so don't get too excited.
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ProposalManiac
· 13h ago
The PMI breaking above 50 needs to be looked at separately — the data itself is not in question, but whether it can be sustained is the key. Historically, the credibility of such a rebound often depends on the design of subsequent policy coordination mechanisms. If incentives are incompatible, the rebound is likely to lose momentum. It depends on whether January can hold steady.
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PretendingSerious
· 13h ago
Chinese manufacturing finally took a breather. The PMI breaking above 50 is indeed a signal. Although it may not mean explosive growth, at least the decline has stopped, which is much better than continuing to fall.
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RunWhenCut
· 13h ago
Chinese manufacturing finally shows signs of improvement, with PMI breaking 50... To be honest, I've been waiting for this moment for a long time.
Manufacturing momentum kicked back in December. China's factory activity just crossed the 50-mark on the PMI scale—the first time since April—signaling genuine demand revival and stabilizing exports. When the purchasing managers' index bounces this way, it typically reflects real ordering activity picking up, which matters for commodity prices, global supply chains, and ultimately how much liquidity flows into different asset classes. The gap from April to now wasn't trivial; months of weakness meant plenty of uncertainty about whether the slowdown would deepen or reverse. This data point suggests the slowdown's hitting a floor. Not explosive growth, but stabilization beats continued contraction every time. Worth watching how this momentum carries into January and whether other major economies show similar patterns.