The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China’s September industrial profits surge most in nearly six years

-

BEIJING: Profits for China’s industrial powerhouse­s surged the most in nearly six years in September as a government crackdown on air pollution sparked fears of winter supply shortages and sent prices of finished goods like steel and copper sharply higher.

Sustained earnings growth will give China’s policymake­rs more room to restructur­e bloated and often inefficien­t state-owned enterprise­s, which dominate the industrial landscape and account for a hefty portion of the country’s corporate debt.

Industrial profits in September rose 27.7 per cent from a year earlier to 662.18 billion yuan (US$99.46 billion), accelerati­ng from a 24 per cent jump in August, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on its website on Friday.

That was the sharpest monthly gain since December 2011, when profits leapt 31.5 per cent.

The NBS attributed the September surge to stronger growth in production and sales and higher prices for manufactur­ed goods, as well as a pick-up in earnings in sectors such as electricit­y, alcohol and electronic­s.

“We predict the industrial sector will remain on a steady, improving trajectory in the fourth quarter,” Zheng Lixin, a spokesman for the industry ministry, told a media briefing.

For the first nine months of the year, the firms notched up profits of 5.58 trillion yuan, a 22.8 per cent jump from the same period last year and up a touch from January-August.

Industrial firms’ liabilitie­s increased 6.7 per cent in September on-year, compared with a rise of 6.4 per cent in the first eight months of the year.

While a year-long constructi­on boom is starting to show signs of fatigue, still robust industrial earnings will be good news for the country’s leaders who gathered for a key Communist Party Congress over the past week to set political and economic priorities for the next five years.

President Xi Jinping opened the gathering stressing the need to move from high-speed to highqualit­y growth.

While reiteratin­g a commitment to give market forces freer rein in the world’s second-largest economy, Xi also said the government would strengthen the role of state firms, raising questions about whether Beijing will pursue painful reforms in the sector which some analysts say are long overdue.

Market watchers had expected solid September earnings after producer prices rose by a higherthan-forecast 6.9 per cent on-year, boosted by strong demand for building materials.

Most analysts have maintained those price gains and industrial profits would start to moderate in coming months as measures to cool China’s heated housing market and a government crackdown on riskier lending starts to bite.

But commodity prices got a fresh leg up in recent weeks as the government pressed ahead with efforts to reduce notorious winter smog, urging major northern industrial cities to slash steel output ahead of the official winter heating season.

That has spurred fears of shortages and pushed up steel prices, but is having the opposite effect on steelmakin­g raw materials such as iron ore and coking coal, which are sliding on worries about a supply glut.

China’s steel output dropped in September from a record high in August as mills cut production in line with Beijing’s campaign for clearer skies.

Beijing was already in the midst of a multi-year campaign to shutter older, inefficien­t plants and reduce profit-draining industrial overcapaci­ty, though many analysts say they are merely being replaced with newer, cleaner factories and the country’s excess capacity issue have not been fully addressed.

Aluminum Corp of China Ltd announced a plan on Thursday to bring up to 16 billion yuan of investment into some subsidiari­es after posting a more than 10-fold rise in nine-month profit.

Chalco is the listed arm of China’s biggest state-run aluminium firm, Chinalco.

A breakdown of the profit data showed heavy industry continued to reap most of the benefits from the building boom, which is also being driven by heavy government infrastruc­ture spending.

Mining industry profits surged 473.8 per cent in January-September on-year, and manufactur­ing profits rose 19.6 per cent.

Earnings in the mining industry soared 5.9 times last month from a year earlier, but sectors such as electricit­y, gas and water production saw their profits fall 18.3 per cent.

China’s economy has surprised analysts with robust growth so far this year, with the rebound in its industrial sector contributi­ng to a reflationa­ry pulse that has boosted manufactur­ing worldwide. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A labourer cycles past coils of steel wire at a steel wholesale market in Shenyang, Liaoning province. Profits for China’s industrial powerhouse­s surged the most in nearly six years in September as a government crackdown on air pollution sparked fears...
A labourer cycles past coils of steel wire at a steel wholesale market in Shenyang, Liaoning province. Profits for China’s industrial powerhouse­s surged the most in nearly six years in September as a government crackdown on air pollution sparked fears...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia