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China’s factory activity completes strongest quarter since late 2020, private PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters Jun 30, 2026 | 8:52 PM

BEIJING, July 1 (Reuters) – China’s manufacturing sector expanded for a seventh straight month in June, completing its strongest quarter since late 2020 as output and new orders continued ​to rise, a business survey showed on Wednesday.

The RatingDog ‌China General Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), compiled by S&P Global, eased to 51.7 in June from 51.8 in May but above analysts’ forecast of 51.6, the survey showed. The 50-mark separates growth from contraction.

The average PMI ‌reading ​for the second quarter was 51.9, the ⁠strongest for any quarter ⁠since the fourth quarter of 2020.

“Overall, the manufacturing sector maintained a steady expansion in June, supported by sustained new order growth, easing cost pressures and improved labour market conditions,” said ​Yao Yu, founder at RatingDog.

An official survey released on Tuesday showed China’s factory activity returned to expansion in June, driven ⁠by demand for chips, computers and ⁠other AI-related products.

Output rose for a seventh straight month, ​although the pace eased to a three-month low, according to the ​RatingDog survey.

Employment increased for the first time in three ‌months, with job creation the strongest since August 2023. Work backlogs also rose for a fifth successive month, suggesting firms faced rising workloads despite higher staffing levels.

Overall new orders increased for the ⁠13th consecutive month, matching the longest expansion streak since 2018.

New export business, however, fell for a second month. Export charges continued to rise ⁠but at the ‌slowest rate since March.

Cost pressures eased further. ⁠Input prices rose for a 12th straight month ​but at ‌the weakest pace since January, while output ​prices increased ⁠for a sixth consecutive month.

The economy showed increasing unevenness, with factory output and exports shoring up growth while household demand remained tepid.

Manufacturers surveyed remained optimistic about the year-ahead outlook, though confidence softened to its lowest since January.

(Reporting by Ellen Zhang and Ryan Woo; Editing ​by Sam Holmes)