China's factory activity expanded in March at its quickest pace in a year, official data showed Tuesday, ending a two-month slump as production picked up after the annual Spring Festival holiday.
The world's second-largest economy has been struggling with a slowdown in domestic demand and investment in recent years that has weighed on its vast manufacturing sector.
Despite this, the manufacturing purchasing managers' index rose to 50.4 in March, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
That figure was up from 49.0 in February and 49.3 in January, and beat a forecast of 50.1 in a Bloomberg survey of economists.
It is the highest since March 2025 when the PMI was 50.5.
NBS statistician Huo Lihui attributed March's expansion to the "resumption of work and production after the Spring Festival", which led to increased market activity.
There was an acceleration in the production activities of manufacturing enterprises and a marked improvement in market demand, Huo said.
The data has underscored some resilience in China's economy despite the uncertainty that the raging Middle East war has brought about, after U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran triggered Tehran's retaliation that sharply restricted access to the Strait of Hormuz.
The outlook for the second quarter is unclear, and the market is "increasingly worried" about the risk of global growth slowdown and supply chain disruption, Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, wrote in a note.
"While China has ample energy reserves to mitigate the term of trade shock, a global growth slowdown would dampen China's exports," Zhang said.