Asian Stock Markets
China’s industrial firms weathered a broad government crackdown on
financial risks as profits continued to surge last month in a
stabilizing force for the world’s second-biggest economy, which has
started to cool slightly in recent months.
Curbs on the property market to fend off speculators are also expected to persist, putting a lid on a range of sectors including construction.
The vast industrial sector has been boosted by a
year-long, government-led construction spree, helping lift demand and
prices for building materials and taking the edge off higher borrowing
costs.
Indeed, mining and heavy industry
contributed the biggest gains in October, propelling overall industrial
profits by 25.1 percent year-on-year to 745.4 billion yuan ($112.94
billion), compared with a 27.7 percent jump in September, the National
Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on Monday.
Despite
the modest slowdown, October’s growth rate was still the second-highest
for a single month this year, and overall profits are on pace to easily
top 2016’s record 6.88 trillion yuan.
The data covers large companies with annual revenue exceeding 20 million yuan from their main businesses.
More than half of the increase in profits in
October came from mining, iron and steel smelting and processing,
chemicals, and oil and natural gas extraction, He Ping of the statistics
bureau said in an accompanying statement.
The
closure of polluting plants and factories have fuelled fears of supply
shortages in the winter, lifting prices of finished goods including
steel and copper products.
The high-price
trend has persisted, with domestic iron ore futures prices up over 15
percent since the start of November, while coking coal has risen over 23
percent.
Data earlier in the month showed
China’s factory prices continued to post strong gains as capacity cuts
and anti-pollution measures kept supply in check.
Factory
activity, however, has cooled in the past few months. A batch of
October data including industrial output, investment and retail sales
also undershot expectations, as Beijing’s crackdown on financial risks
raised borrowing costs, while the tighter pollution rules have shut many
factories and mines.
These factors have
started to drag on Asia’s economic powerhouse, which has defied market
expectations with growth of 6.9 percent in the first nine months of the
year, supported by the construction boom and robust exports.
Curbs on the property market to fend off speculators are also expected to persist, putting a lid on a range of sectors including construction.
Despite the government’s focus on reducing
corporate leverage, the asset to liability ratio has remained unchanged
at 55.7 percent for the last three months, indicating efforts to improve
balance sheets at Chinese firms may have stagnated.
Growth
in liabilities has also picked up this year. At the end of October,
industrial firms’ liabilities were 6.7 percent higher than a year
earlier, compared with a 6.7 percent increase as of the end of September
and 6.3 percent growth for 2016.
China’s stock markets were down in Monday morning
trading, as jitters over an effort to improve oversight in the financial
industry pulled down companies in the sector, led by a 1.64 percent
decline in the Shanghai Stock Exchange’s banking index.
In
the first 10 months, industrial firms notched up profits of 6.25
trillion yuan, up 23.3 percent from a year earlier, compared with a 22.8
percent gain in January-September.
There was
some moderation in profit growth for upstream industries, as mining
profits rose 405.4 percent from a year earlier in January-October,
compared to 473.8 percent growth in the first nine months of the year.
Profits
earned by China’s state-owned firms rose a sharp 48.7 percent to 1.41
trillion yuan in the first 10 months, compared to 47.6 percent in
January-September.
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