Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Manufacturer
Sell Buy Corporation Information
Home > Resources
Manage
Mainland shares gain; Shanghai Automotive rises
Wahaha steps up legal threat in Danone battle
Draft on foreign M&As gets 2nd reading
Flurry of export activity as tax rebate deadline looms
Chinese firms' outsourcing revenue to reach US$7b in 2011
Funds and brokers to join the QDII program
carve out
China considers to suspend or reduce interest tax on bank savings
China launches trade, investment fund targeting Africa continent
Funds and brokers look forward to QDII scheme
Nanjing and Ningbo city banks get nod for IPOs
Wahaha claims Danone's appointment 'illegal'
China's energy-efficiency drive to create lucrative building market
Resources
China mulls issue of 1.55 trillion yuan of treasury bonds to buy forex
Exchange starts gold trading via local banks
China's dairy production ranks third in the world
Chinese gov't to allocate 6.5 bln yuan to tether pork prices
China's largest steelmakers triple profit
Food costs to fuel CPI above 3% annual target
China industrial-company profits climb 42%
SHANGHAI, June 27 -- CHINA'S industrial-company profits swelled 42.1 percent in the first five months from a year earlier, hampering government efforts to cool investment in the world's fastest-growing major economy.


Combined net income increased to 902.6 billion yuan (US$119 billion), the National Bureau of Statistics said today in an e-mailed release. Sales jumped 27.4 percent to 14.2 trillion yuan, Bloomberg reported.


Premier Wen Jiabao is trying to prevent a rebound in factory investment that would increase the risk of overcapacity. Besides curbs on bank lending, the government has ordered state companies to start paying dividends to trim the money available for investment.


``The strong growth will fuel increased investment,'' said Qu Hongbin, chief China economist at HSBC Holdings Plc in Hong Kong. ``Monetary tightening needs to be continued.''


The government announced the trial dividend program last month. China has also tightened project approvals, curbed land use, increased energy costs, and cut export rebates. The central bank has raised interest rates twice this year.


Wen on June 14 highlighted the risk of a rebound in fixed-asset investment and signaled monetary tightening is likely.


Chemical-fiber companies' profits more than tripled, while those of steelmakers more than doubled.


Tangshan Iron & Steel Co, a unit of China's second-biggest steelmaker, may report an 80 percent increase in first-half profit from a year earlier, the company said previously.


Coal companies' profits jumped 43.1 percent from a year earlier, while those of businesses manufacturing construction materials soared 70.1 percent.


The government last month started a campaign to cool excess growth in industries including iron, steel, copper, aluminum, zinc and cement that pollute and consume energy heavily.


Industrial companies' profits rose 43.8 percent in the first two months, the most recent previous figure released by the government. They climbed 25.5 percent in the first five months of last year.


China's economy, the world's fourth largest, grew 11.1 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier, up from a 10.4 percent expansion in the previous three months. Officials are concerned that an investment boom in stocks, factories and real estate, fueled by cash from record trade surpluses, may end in an abrupt economic slump.


Factory and property investment jumped 25.9 percent in the first five months from a year earlier, accelerating from the 25.5 percent growth through April.


Wen said two weeks ago that he's concerned by ``rapid growth in industrial production and the trade surplus, fast investment growth, excessive liquidity, increasing inflationary pressure and energy conservation challenges.''


The government is trying to curb the economy's dependence on exports and investment by boosting domestic consumption. The trade surplus surged 73 percent in May from a year earlier to US$22.5 billion.


China raised the benchmark one-year lending rate to 6.57 percent on May 18 and increased the deposit rate to 3.06 percent. The central bank has also ordered lenders to set aside more reserves five times this year.


Today's figures reflect operating profits, and don't include stock-market investment gains, according to Grace Ng, an economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Hong Kong. The numbers are for all state-owned industrial companies and others with annual sales of at least 5 million yuan

About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2005-2010,www.863171.net Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.