Growth in pockets from real estate to manufacturing has improved since Beijing began announcing stimulus measures in late September.
China's latest efforts to kickstart growth haven't had a broad impact yet, data and company earnings show, indicating the world's second-largest economy won't be roaring back soon.
The ramp-up in stimulus measures is aimed at reaching this year's official target of around 5%, and a similar pace next year — while preventing financial instability, Gabriel Wildau, managing director at Teneo, said in a note Monday.
"Looking ahead, our sources expect that stimulus in 2025 will trickle out incrementally and in a data-dependent fashion," Wildau said.
"Beijing's stimulus measures encouraged firms to come off the sidelines this month," the report said.
Persons:
Tencent, Shaohui Chen, haven't, Gabriel Wildau, Wildau, Wang Zhe, Wang, Donald Trump
Organizations:
Beijing, Companies, PMI, Caixin Insight, China's Ministry of Finance
Locations:
China