China’s industrial profits up 16.2% in first eight months
2018-09-27
Xinhua
BEIJING — Profits of China’s major industrial firms grew 16.2 percent in the first eight months of 2018, down from a rise of 17.1 percent for the January-July period, data showed on Sept 27.
Some 34 of the 41 industries monitored by the government recorded rising profits compared with one year earlier, up from 32 for January-July, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
Although industrial profits rose at a slower pace, NBS official He Ping said supply-side structural reform has led to falling operating costs and leverage ratios, while industrial companies’ profitability continued to improve.
In the first eight months, cost per 100 yuan (about $14.6) of revenue dropped 0.35 yuan from the same period last year to 84.39 yuan, according to He.
The debt-asset ratios of major industrial firms dropped 0.5 percentage points year-on-year to 56.6 percent by the end of August.
Overseas-funded industrial firms recorded faster profit growth compared with the January-July period, while profit growth at State-owned enterprises declined.
For August alone, profits of major industrial companies nationwide rose 9.2 percent from one year earlier, decelerating from a rise of 16.2 percent registered in July.
He Ping attributed the slower growth in August to a higher comparative base from last year and a pullback in the growth of revenues and product prices.