China’s factory activity improves in June as exports surge ahead of domestic weakness China's official manufacturing PMI rose to 50.3 in June, marking four consecutive months of expansion, driven by a surge in exports of AI-related hardware. However, the employment sub-index remained in contraction at 48.4, indicating factories are increasing output without hiring more workers. China’s factory activity improves in June as exports surge ahead of domestic weakness Official manufacturing PMI hit 50.3 in June, marking four straight months of expansion, but a weak employment reading tells a more complicated story. China’s manufacturing sector notched its fourth consecutive month of expansion in June, with the official Purchasing Managers’ Index climbing to 50.3 from May’s 50.0. The reading beat the Reuters forecast of 50.1 and kept the index comfortably above the 50 line that separates growth from contraction. Exports are carrying the load The new export orders sub-index bounced back to 50.1 in June after contracting in May. May’s export data painted a clearer picture of what’s fueling the rebound. China’s exports surged 19.4% year-on-year to a record $376.78 billion, driven by insatiable global appetite for AI-related products. Automated data processing equipment, a category that captures much of the AI hardware supply chain, rose 66.1% year-on-year. Output within the manufacturing sector ticked up to 51.4 from 51.2, while new orders overall jumped to 51.2 from May’s contracted reading of 49.9. The private sector’s RatingDog Manufacturing PMI registered in the 51.6 to 51.8 range in recent months. The divergence between the official and private PMI readings has historically reflected differences in how state-owned enterprises and private firms experience the same economic cycle. The employment problem nobody wants to talk about If the export data is the good news, the employment sub-index is the cold shower. It came in at 48.4 in June, firmly in contraction territory. In English: factories are producing more stuff but not hiring more people to do it. For an economy where youth unemployment has been a persistent political headache, a manufacturing sector that grows output without growing payrolls is a mixed blessing at best. What this means for investors The sustained manufacturing expansion, combined with record export performance, creates a specific investment thesis: China’s economy is increasingly a play on global AI infrastructure demand. The 66.1% year-on-year surge in automated data processing equipment exports positions Chinese manufacturers as critical nodes in the AI supply chain. Four consecutive months above 50 is not a fluke; it’s a trend. And the composition of that trend, heavily weighted toward high-tech exports, aligns with the sectors where China has been making deliberate industrial policy investments for years. The employment weakness adds another layer of concern. Manufacturing expansion that doesn’t generate jobs limits the multiplier effect on the broader economy, as household income growth and job security haven’t kept pace with industrial output gains. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .