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Moody's sees China Resilience, Moves Outlook to 'Stable'

April 27 (Reuters) - Credit ratings agency Moody's on Monday ​revised China's outlook to "stable" from "negative", citing ‌resilient economic and fiscal strength despite ongoing domestic pressures and challenges in trade and geopolitics.

The ratings ​agency said export growth is likely ​to moderate, but China's competitiveness should ⁠cushion the slowdown, allowing GDP growth to ​ease only gradually.

China's finance ministry said on ​Monday that it appreciated the agency's decision to maintain China's sovereign credit rating and upgrade its outlook, ​and vowed to further transform economic ​structure and enhance fiscal sustainability, according to a statement.

China's ‌industrial ⁠profits grew at their quickest pace in half a year last month, highlighting an uneven recovery with strong manufacturing but weak consumption, ​slowing exports ​and rising ⁠risks from higher costs and Middle East tensions.

Moody's added that policies ​focused on high-productivity sectors and ​a ⁠controlled approach to resolving regional and local government debt would help improve capital efficiency, even ⁠as ​overall government debt rises.

Reporting ​by Aatrayee Chatterjee in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Beijing ​Newsroom; Editing by Vijay Kishore and Louise Heavens

Source: Reuters


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