Profits at industrial companies in China fell for a seventh month, extending a record streak of declines, as demand and sales weakened amid the economic slowdown.
Total profits of China's industrial enterprises fell 4.7 per cent in December from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics said Wednesday in Beijing. That compared with a 1.4 per cent drop in November and was the third-biggest drop in more than three years, based on previously reported NBS data since 2011.
A main reason for the drop was "weak demand, which led to significant deceleration in production and sales," NBS said in a statement with the data, which includes both state-owned and privately owned enterprises.
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"Monetary policy will have to remain extremely relaxed to help reduce the borrowing costs for the corporates."
Full-year industrial profits dropped 2.3 per cent in 2015 from the prior year, NBS said. Mining-sector profits dropped 58.2 per cent, led by a 75 per cent slide for oil and natural gas sector earnings and a 65 per cent decrease for coal companies.
Those losses were offset by a 2.8 per cent gain for manufacturing profits last year, which wasled by a 9.1 per cent gain for food companies.
State-owned enterprises registered a profit drop of 21.9 per cent for the full year, compared with a 3.7 per cent rise in the earnings for privately owned firms.