(Reuters) Profits at China’s industrial firms returned to
growth in July, helped by public works spending and improved margins in
the petrochemical and auto sectors, but an economic slowdown and the
U.S. trade war are expected to weigh on the business outlook.
Industrial profits rose 2.6% in July year-on-year to 512.7 billion
yuan ($72.28 billion), according to data released by the National
Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Tuesday, swinging from a 3.1% decline in
June.
Despite the turnaround in headline growth, worsening conditions for
businesses exposed to global trade and smaller private sector firms are
likely to add to case for more government support to shore up slowing
economic growth.
“The downward pressure on the economy is relatively high, the market
demand is slowing down, the prices of industrial products are falling,”
the statistics bureau’s senior statistician, Zhu Hong, said in a
statement accompanying the data.
“There will still likely be volatility and uncertainty in profits of industrial enterprises,” Zhu said.
ING Greater China Economist Iris Pang said public infrastructure
spending had supported firms’ return to profit growth, particularly for
electric products companies. However, persistent cash flow pressures
felt by export firms and smaller businesses supported arguments for the
government to do more.
“We believe that most private enterprises suffer from long account
receivable cycles,” Pang wrote in a note. “They may be the low-end
subcontractors of infrastructure projects. We worry that they may be the
last to receive payments from their construction works.”
She expects more central bank support, such as added liquidity and
cuts to banks’ reserve requirements, which would free up the flow of
credit to smaller firms.
For January-July, industrial firms earned profits of 3.50 trillion
yuan, down 1.7% from a year earlier. That compared with a 2.4% fall in
the first six months.
The uptick in July came mainly from petrochemical and auto sectors,
the statistics bureau said in a separate statement on the data.
China’s industrial profits have broadly slowed since the second half
of 2018 as economic growth skidded to a near 30-year low while an
escalating U.S.-China trade war slashed already lean earnings for
businesses.
The July expansion in industrial profits contrasts with sluggish
producer inflation and waning industrial output growth, which sank to
record lows in July, indicating weakness in both the demand and supply
sides.
As the trade dispute fuels global recession worries, investors and
analysts have been expecting new stimulus measures from Beijing to boost
domestic demand and lower funding costs for firms.
To offset the effects of the U.S. trade war, Chinese policymakers
have rolled out various growth measures including reserve requirement
ratio cuts, tax cuts and a push for banks to lend to smaller companies.
But Beijing has also maintained it would not resort to a “flood-like
stimulus.”
Profitability in Beijing’s oil refining sector has improved, with
margins at refineries boosted by demand for diesel. But analysts warn
this could be temporary as the industry still has to cope with
overcapacity and ample supply of refined oil products.
The decline in the auto sector’s net profit also narrowed in July,
but overall car sales were down for a 13th consecutive month in July.
The prolonged sales decline has made local carmakers like Geely and Great Wall cut earnings forecast.
China’s exports unexpectedly returned to growth in July on improved global demand despite escalating U.S. trade pressure.
Profits at China’s state-owned industrial firms dropped 8.1% on an
annual basis for January-July, the statistics bureau data showed.
Liabilities of industrial firms were up 4.9% on-year at end-July, compared with a 5.6% increase as of end-June.
Private sector profits rose 7.0% in Jan-July, quickening from a 6.0% growth in the first six months.
Source: Reuters; Additional reporting by Yawen Chen and Stella Qiu in Beijing; Editing by Sam Holmes
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