China’s industrial profits sink more than 9% in May

By MG News | June 27, 2025 at 03:48 PM GMT+05:00
June 27, 2025 (MLN): China’s industrial profits plunged 9.1% in May from a year earlier,
in the latest sign that Beijing’s stimulus efforts are falling short in
boosting enterprises’ profitability.
That marked the largest monthly decline
since October last year, when the industrial profits dropped 10%. Industrial
profits are a key measure of the financial health of factories, mines, and
utilities in China.
Cumulative
profits at major industrial firms fell 1.1% in the first five months of 2025,
compared to a year earlier, as per CNBC.
The statistics bureau attributed the
sharp decline in May to insufficient domestic demand and lower prices for
industrial products.
In September last year, industrial
profits recorded an eye-watering 27.1% year-on-year drop, leading Beijing
to ramp up stimulus in its bid to reverse the slump in corporate earnings.
During the five-month period, the mining industry saw profits
decline 29%, while manufacturing and utility industries saw modest profit
gains.
Profits in the automotive manufacturing
sector dropped 11.9% from a year earlier.
State-owned
firms recorded a 7.4% drop in profits in the first five months, while
non-state-owned businesses saw profits fall 1.5%.
Foreign industrial firms, including those
with investments from Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan, saw a modest profit rise of
0.3% in the January to May period from a year ago.
The data followed a mixed bag of economic
data out of China last month. China’s retail sales grew at their fastest rate
since late 2023 in May, rising 6.4% from a year ago, as government
subsidies helped boost consumption, while industrial output and fixed-asset
investment both missed expectations.
The recovery in retail sales did not
translate into greater profits for businesses due to depressed price levels,
said Alfredo Montufar-Helu, senior advisor for China Center at think tank The
Conference Board.
“Foot traffic in stores, restaurants, and
hotels has improved ... [partly because] prices are lower than pre-Covid
levels, coupled with an increase in promotions and discounts,” he said.
On the supply side, a deepening price war
is ripping through industries, Montufar-Helu added, as companies are “fiercely
vying for market share” at the expense of profit margins.
Economists had suggested that Chinese
authorities may withhold additional stimulus firepower until signs of deeper
economic stress emerge.
With most economic indicators pointing to
robust performance in the economy, the latest decline in industrial profits is
unlikely to “serve as a counterbalancing factor that will spur government
actions,” said Tianchen Xu, senior economist at Economist Intelligence Unit.
“The worst might be over” for the
manufacturers’ profit margins, Xu added, while pointing to the recent drop in
global commodity prices as the main reason weighing on Chinese industrial
firms’ profitability.
Robin Xing, chief China economist at Morgan Stanley, said in a
note Friday that China’s GDP growth is tracking at 5%, taking the first
half-year growth to 5.2%, above Beijing’s official target of 5%.
That could reduce the urgency for Beijing to step up stimulus at
the upcoming Politburo meeting in July, Xing added.
Echoing that view, Neo Wang, lead China economist and strategist
at Evercore ISI said in a note that “there is no guarantee of more stimulus”
from next month’s meeting of the Politburo — the second most powerful political
body in the country — citing the recovery in consumer sentiment and rebound in
retail growth last month.
“Stimulus or not will depend on Beijing’s assessment of the
U.S.-China trade talks in late July and the expected tariff direction,” Wang
added.
China’s exports this year have held up despite the erratic U.S.
tariff policy, thanks to a surge in shipments to Southeast Asia and European
Union countries. In May, the country’s exports rose 4.8% from a year earlier,
even as the U.S.-bound shipment plunged 34.5% from a year ago.
Citi Bank expects the country’s overall exports to grow a decent
2.3%, while factoring in an estimated 10% decline in shipments to the U.S.
U.S. President Donald Trump said Wednesday that a deal with China
had been signed, without providing additional details. A White House official
later clarified that “the administration and China agreed to an additional
understanding of a framework to implement the Geneva agreement.”
Both sides agreed to a 90‑day pause on May 12, which entailed
rolling back some U.S. tariffs and China’s export restraints on critical
minerals.
The Geneva deal later faltered over China’s curbs on critical
mineral exports and the U.S. tightening restrictions on tech and Chinese
student visas.
For the second half of this year, Morgan Stanley’s Xing cautioned that the economic growth is likely to soften, in view of persistent deflationary pressure, payback of front-loaded exports and tariff impacts on its direct exports to the U.S.
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