June was a good month for China’s small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), according to Standard Chartered’s proprietary survey of over 500 SMEs across the Mainland market.
We surveyed the performance of SMEs over a range of key indicators monthly, providing a regular temperature-check on these crucial drivers of economic growth. This month, our Headline Small and Medium Enterprise Index (SMEI) has risen to 53.3 from 51.7 in May, indicating that SMEs are slowly bouncing back.
As China gradually resumes business activity, the improved performance of SMEs in many sectors could bode well for businesses in other regions of the world looking to recover from the impact of COVID-19.
With the easing of lockdown measures, domestic demand in China has picked up, driving rapid growth in SME sales. Production activity also increased in June, with an accelerated use of capacity and a mild increase in hiring.
As SMEs contribute about 80 percent of hiring in China’s urban areas, policymakers have prioritized the protection of their employment levels this year. With the improved activity in June, our ‘employment expectations’ indicator rose more significantly than in previous months to 53.2 from 52.1 last month.
From higher commodity prices to food security concerns and ongoing supply chain constraints, global markets…
In its meeting on June 2, OPEC+ agreed to speed up its production hikes, pledging…
Keppel Telecommunications & Transportation (Keppel T&T) has entered a deal to divest all of its stake…
Olam International obtained an aggregate US$4 billion in financing facilities from multiple banks as part…
Keppel Infrastructure Trust (KIT) entered a deal to invest US$250 million in a minority stake in…
Large professional investors have experience and connections in-country along sectors of interest. They depend on…