China industrial profit growth slows in May, first dip in six months

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China industrial profit growth slows in May, first dip in six months

Synopsis

China's industrial profit growth hit its first speed bump in six months in May 2026, slipping to 21.1% from April's 24.7% despite a historic exit from factory-gate deflation and an AI-driven export boom. The culprit is structural: strong supply, weak domestic demand — a combination that NBS analyst Yu Weining acknowledged openly, and one that no export surge alone can fix.

Key Takeaways

China's industrial profit growth slowed to 21.1 per cent year-on-year in May 2026 , down from 24.7 per cent in April — the first deceleration in six months .
Cumulative profits for January–May 2026 rose 18.8 per cent , slightly below market expectations of 19 per cent .
Total industrial profits over the first five months stood at 3.14 trillion yuan , below the equivalent 2022 period.
Raw-materials manufacturing contributed 10.2 percentage points to profit growth; high-tech manufacturing added 8 percentage points .
NBS analyst Yu Weining flagged that 'strong supply and weak demand' remained an outstanding problem for many industries.
A low base effect — industrial earnings fell 9.1 per cent in May 2025 — partly flattered the year-on-year comparison.

China's industrial profit growth decelerated in May 2026 for the first time in six months, signalling that robust export performance and recovering producer prices have not been enough to compensate for persistently weak domestic demand, according to data released by China's National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

Key Figures

Industrial profits rose 21.1 per cent year-on-year in May, easing from the 24.7 per cent growth recorded in April — the first moderation since November 2025. For the January–May 2026 period, industrial companies reported a cumulative profit increase of 18.8 per cent, falling marginally short of market expectations of 19 per cent. Total industrial profits over the first five months reached 3.14 trillion yuan, still below levels recorded during the same period in 2022.

Sectors Driving Growth

The raw-materials manufacturing sector contributed the largest share, accounting for 10.2 percentage points of overall profit growth during the first five months. High-tech manufacturing added 8 percentage points, while equipment manufacturing contributed 5.2 percentage points.

The NBS noted that rising demand linked to artificial intelligence (AI) applications boosted earnings in the electronics industry as well as in non-ferrous metals sectors such as aluminium and copper. Higher commodity prices, partly driven by disruptions in global energy markets stemming from Middle East tensions, also lent support to industrial profits.

The Domestic Demand Problem

Analysts cautioned that the latest figures underscore an unresolved structural challenge: sluggish investment activity and cautious household spending continue to cap the strength of China's broader economic recovery. The gains from stronger exports and improving industrial prices have not translated into a broad-based demand revival.

Notably, the May profit numbers also benefited from a favourable base effect — industrial earnings had contracted 9.1 per cent in May 2025, making the year-on-year comparison easier to beat.

China exited more than three years of factory-gate deflation in March 2026, and producer prices rose in May at their fastest pace since 2022, supported by the global boom in AI investments and strong overseas demand for advanced manufacturing goods. Yet these tailwinds have proved insufficient to offset the drag from the domestic side.

Official Assessment

NBS analyst Yu Weining said in a statement: 'The problem of strong supply and weak demand within the country remained outstanding and companies in some industries were still facing difficulties.'

What to Watch

With domestic consumption showing little sign of a sharp recovery, analysts say the trajectory of China's industrial profits in the coming months will depend heavily on whether policy stimulus translates into genuine household and investment demand — or whether the economy continues to rely on exports as its primary growth engine. Any escalation in global trade tensions or a softening of AI-driven demand could further narrow the support available to the industrial sector.

Point of View

Not consumption-driven. A 21.1 per cent profit rise sounds strong until you note that it is built on a base where earnings collapsed 9.1 per cent a year earlier, and that total profits still trail 2022 levels. Beijing's repeated stimulus signals have not yet moved the household spending needle in any durable way. Until domestic demand becomes a genuine co-engine — not just a talking point — China's industrial cycle will remain hostage to export conditions and commodity price swings that it cannot control.
NationPress
28 Jun 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did China's industrial profit growth slow in May 2026?
China's industrial profit growth eased to 21.1 per cent year-on-year in May 2026, down from 24.7 per cent in April, primarily because weak domestic demand — marked by sluggish investment and cautious household spending — offset gains from stronger exports and rising producer prices. It was the first slowdown in profit growth since November 2025.
What were China's total industrial profits in the first five months of 2026?
Total industrial profits reached 3.14 trillion yuan during January–May 2026, below the level recorded in the same period in 2022. The cumulative year-on-year growth of 18.8 per cent came in slightly below market expectations of 19 per cent.
Which sectors contributed most to China's industrial profit growth?
Raw-materials manufacturing contributed 10.2 percentage points to overall profit growth in the first five months, followed by high-tech manufacturing at 8 percentage points and equipment manufacturing at 5.2 percentage points. AI-related demand boosted electronics, aluminium, and copper sectors.
How does the base effect influence China's May profit figures?
The year-on-year comparison was made easier by a weak base: China's industrial earnings had fallen 9.1 per cent in May 2025. This base effect partly inflated the 21.1 per cent growth reading for May 2026.
What is the outlook for China's industrial profits?
Analysts say the trajectory depends on whether domestic demand recovers meaningfully, as exports and AI-driven investment cannot indefinitely substitute for household consumption. Any softening of global AI spending or an escalation in trade tensions could further pressure profit growth in the months ahead.
Nation Press
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