Global Times

Industrial profits see rebound

Growth momentum strong despite pollution rules

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Profits earned by industrial firms in April rose at their fastest pace in six months, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed on Sunday, as factories benefited from higher prices and strong demand.

Profits in April rose 21.9 percent year-on-year to 576 billion yuan ($90.14 billion), the quickest since October, bringing gains for the first four months of 2018 to 15 percent.

The data suggests China’s industrial sector is still seeing solid growth momentum despite curbs on pollution and rocky trade relations with the US.

April’s rebound was helped by lower comparison figures for April 2017, higher factory prices and stronger demand, He Ping, head of the NBS’ industrial division, said in a statement.

It was a significan­t improvemen­t over March’s 3.1 percent growth, which was the slowest in over a year and which government officials had blamed on the timing of the Lunar New Year holiday.

The higher April data should help ease concerns about slowing momentum in China’s economy as the country implements tougher pollution controls on “smokestack” industries and cash-strapped regional government­s cut back on big investment projects, curbing demand for building materials.

Profit growth for Chinese industrial firms has softened from last year’s strong pace as factory gate price gains weaken. In the first four months of 2017, profits rose 24.4 percent.

China’s producer price inflation picked up to 3.4 percent in April from March but was much lower than 6.4 percent in the year-ago period.

Weaker profit growth suggests companies may be reluctant to invest and hire new staff, while making it harder for debt-laden firms to service their debt, especially State-owned enterprise­s that account for the bulk of the country’s high leverage.

Reuters analysis showed that debt growth for Chinese companies has slowed to the lowest rate in more than a decade, but companies have also seen profit margins squeezed to their lowest level in two years.

April economic data had shown signs of slowing momentum as investment growth touched a near 20year low and retail sales growth weakened.

Despite stronger-than-expected first-quarter economic growth, economists polled by Reuters still expect a gradual slowdown to around 6.5 percent this year from 6.9 percent in 2017, as rising borrowing costs weigh on consumptio­n and investment.

April’s rebound was led by the steel, chemicals and automobile industries, said He, as profits for iron and steel processing firms rose 260 percent in April.

No industrial sectors recorded year-on-year losses in the January to April period, the data showed.

But earnings in the computer and telecommun­ications sector fell 5.3 percent in the four months, though that was a slight improvemen­t from an 11 percent decline in the first quarter.

Liabilitie­s of industrial firms rose 6.1 percent year-on-year as of endApril, according to the statistics bureau.

Profits at China’s State-owned firms rose 26.2 percent to 627 billion yuan for January-April, compared with a 23.1 percent rise in the first quarter.

The data includes companies with annual revenue of more than 20 million yuan from their main operations.

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