China's industrial profit growth slows for sixth month in August

Profits rose 10.1% on year to 680.3 billion yuan ($105 billion) last month compared with a 16.4% gain in July, data from China's statistics bureau showed on Tuesday.

China
For the January-August period, industrial firms' profits rose 49.5% year-on-year to 5.61 trillion yuan, slowing from a 57.3% increase in the first seven months of 2021
Reuters Beijing
2 min read Last Updated : Sep 28 2021 | 8:23 AM IST
Profits at China's industrial firms grew at a weaker pace in August from a year earlier, slowing for a sixth consecutive month, as manufacturers struggled with high commodity prices, COVID-19 outbreaks and shortages in some key components.
 
Profits rose 10.1% on year to 680.3 billion yuan ($105 billion) last month compared with a 16.4% gain in July, data from China's statistics bureau showed on Tuesday.
 
Momentum in the world's second-biggest economy has weakened in recent months with its vast manufacturing sector buffeted by gathering headwinds.
 
Industrial production rose in August at its slackest pace since July 2020, weighed by domestic Covid-19 outbreaks, high raw material prices, a campaign by Beijing to cut carbon emissions and a persistent shortage in parts such as semiconductors.
 
For the January-August period, industrial firms' profits rose 49.5% year-on-year to 5.61 trillion yuan, slowing from a 57.3% increase in the first seven months of 2021.
 
"A sustained and stable recovery in corporate profits is facing more challenges," said Zhu Hong, senior statistician at the statistics bureau, in a statement.
 
"The epidemic is still spreading in some areas, overall prices of bulk commodities are high, the cost of international logistics is elevated, and the shortage of chips is pushing up corporate costs."
 
High commodity prices in recent months have hurt the bottom-lines of many medium-sized and downstream factories.
 
China last week vowed to step up policy coordination to counter challenges from high commodity prices.
 
To cool prices, China will further auction industrial metals from its state stockpiles next month in a rare release of inventories. Prior to this year, Beijing had not sold off state metal reserves for more than a decade.
 
Earlier this month, China also released crude oil from its strategic reserves for the first time.
 
But further dimming the outlook for manufacturers, China has tightened controls on power usage by energy-intensive firms to meet climate goals, hurting production. The power shortages have also triggered electricity cuts across regions this month, clouding the economic outlook.
 
Liabilities at industrial firms rose 8.4% on an annual basis at end-August, up from 8.2% growth as of end-July.
 
The industrial profit data covers large firms with annual revenues of over 20 million yuan from their main operations.
 

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Topics :Chinese industrial profitsChina economy

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