Standard Chartered GBA Business Confidence Survey shows calm before tariff storm in Q1
2025年4月15日 - 7:57PM
JCN Newswire
The latest Standard Chartered GBA Business Confidence Index
(GBAI) jointly published by Standard Chartered and the Hong Kong
Trade Development Council (HKTDC) today indicated broad-based
improvement in business sentiment in the region for the first
quarter of 2025.
The GBAI "current performance" index for business activity rose to
53.5 in Q1 from 50.7 prior - the highest since Q2-2024. Six of the
eight index components rose quarter-on-quarter, and all previous
sub-50 underperformers rallied back above the neutral mark, namely
"apacity utilisation" (+3.2pts), "raw material inventory"
(+9.0pts), "financing scale" (+3.2pts) and "profits" (+3.1pts).
The GBAI "expectations" index for business activity improved in
tandem with its "current performance" counterpart, to 54.3 in Q1
from 52.9 in Q4-2024. Encouragingly, seven of eight expectation
sub-indices rose quarter-on-quarter, led by a 3.1 percentage point
increase in "profits" and a 2.8 percentage point increase in "raw
material inventory".
All the city sub-indices, be it "current performance" or
"expectations", rose quarter-on-quarter, with Shenzhen being the
only exception. Hong Kong extended its rising "current performance"
streak to four straight quarters, to 53.5; its "expectations" index
jumped to 56.9 - bested only by Guangzhou - from 50.8 prior.
Guangzhou's current and expectation prints stood at 60.3 and 58.0,
respectively, the highest among cities.
This showed that GBA companies weathered the initial rounds of US
tariff hikes (10%+10%) well, in part thanks to the DeepSeek
breakthrough lifting market sentiment as well as the rising
prospect of more policy stimulus from China's policymakers.
However, respondents' more-upbeat outlook in February-March (when
the Q1 survey was conducted) likely did not prepare them for recent
events - US' announcement of sweeping and sizeable reciprocal
tariff hikes on China and most other countries.
Kelvin Lau, Senior Economist, Greater China and North Asia,
Standard Chartered, said: "Given the urgency to stabilise market
sentiment following the tariff-induced sell-off, the likelihood of
China cutting the reserve requirement ratio and/or policy rate
(7-day reverse repo rate) in April has materially increased. We
expect that both monetary and fiscal policies on the Mainland will
stay supportive. Meanwhile, Hong Kong would need to ramp up
short-term support to SMEs and continue to diversify its trade to
facilitate more non-US trade corridors. Our next survey, to be
conducted in May-June, should provide a better view of the
readiness of GBA businesses to live with high tariffs."
More consumption boosts welcomed
Looking ahead, 41% of respondents saw a positive impact from the
consumption boosting initiatives announced by China in January.
Meanwhile, 38% said the consumer goods trade-in programme would
bring positive impact on their business. When asked what else the
government could do to expand the consumption-supportive measures,
the most popular suggestion was "relax market access for private
sector and foreign investment to help boost services
consumption".
Wing Chu, Principal Economist (Greater China Research Team), HKTDC,
said: "Boosting domestic demand is one of the government's top
priorities, as highlighted in the Government Work Report delivered
by Chinese Premier Li Qiang in March. More than 50% of respondents
have indicated that they are either already well positioned to tap
into the mainland consumer market or are currently expanding or
planning to expand their operations to do so. Additional supportive
measures from the government could further bolster their
businesses."
About the GBAI
The GBAI is the first forward-looking quarterly survey in the
market that looks at the business sentiment and synergistic effects
in cities and industries across the GBA. It is compiled based on a
survey of more than 1,000 companies in the GBA covering the
manufacturing and trading, retail and wholesale, financial
services, professional services and innovation and technology
sectors. The index enables investors and businesses to better
understand the current business climate, gauge future performance
prospects and formulate their market strategies for the GBA.
Related materials
Standard Chartered GBA Business Confidence Index Report:
https://www.sc.com/hk/gba/gba-index-report/HKTDC Research:
https://research.hktdc.com/en/article/MTk4MDY0MTYwOQ
(From left) Kelvin Lau, Senior Economist, Greater China and North
Asia, Standard Chartered, and Wing Chu, Principal Economist
(Greater China Research Team), HKTDC, announced the latest GBA
Business Confidence Index (GBAI) today (15 April 2025).
Kelvin Lau, Senior Economist, Greater China and North Asia,
Standard Chartered
Wing Chu, Principal Economist (Greater China Research Team),
HKTDC
Media enquiries
Corporate Affairs Department
Standard Chartered Bank (Hong Kong) Limited
Flora Chiu
Tel: (852) 3843 2285
Email: flora.chiu@sc.com
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HKTDC
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Clayton Lauw Tel: (852) 2584 4472 Email:
clayton.y.lauw@hktdc.org
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