Headline SMEI retreated to 50 in August; the performance sub-index fell into contractionary territory. The softening was broad-based, albeit modest, across both manufacturing and services SMEs. Sub-indices stayed solid for sales and improved for new orders; price, investment, profitability dropped. Credit conditions remained stable; a handful of SMEs said that banks became less willing to lend, Standard Chartered's economists Hunter Chan and Carol Liao report.
"Our proprietary Small and Medium Enterprise Confidence Index (SMEI; Bloomberg: SCCNSMEI
"Less manufacturing SMEs reported an increase in sales versus July, while more noted an increase in new orders. That said, new export orders stalled again in August and production activity fell. Export-oriented SMEs had similar responses. By sector, real estate, and retail and wholesale SMEs continued to face significant pressure on sales and new orders; construction SMEs also noted no major improvement in these areas."
"The credit sub-index inched down 0.1pts to 50 in August, indicating still-stable credit and liquidity conditions for SMEs. A handful (less than 1%) suggested that banks appeared less willing to lend to SMEs compared with July. Interestingly, all respondents expect a stable USD-CNY exchange rate in the coming three months."