China's factory activity shrank for an eighth straight month in November, official data showed on Sunday, suggesting the world's second-largest economy remains subdued despite a trade truce with the U.S.
The manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) was 49.2 in November, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
That marked an improvement from 49 recorded in October but remained below the 50 mark that separates expansion from contraction.
The reading missed a median forecast of 49.4 from a Bloomberg survey of economists.
The slight uptick comes after Chinese leader Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump met in South Korea in October and agreed on a temporary truce in their bruising trade war.
Trump said he would halve a 20-percent tariff on Chinese goods and Xi agreed to suspend certain export restrictions on the key rare-earth sector for one year.
China would also resume purchases of U.S. soybeans after orders came to a halt this harvest season, according to Trump.
Meanwhile, the non-manufacturing PMI, which measures activity in sectors including services and construction, was 49.5 in November, marking the first contraction in nearly three years.
Weakness in the real estate and residential services sectors helped drag the figure down 0.6 percentage points from October.
Despite signs of weakness, the Chinese economy remains on course to hit its annual growth target of around 5 percent this year.