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China's Q2 Cumulative Industrial Profits Climb 18.8%; AI Export Demand Becomes Key Engine for Recovery

2026-06-27

  1. Core Overview The latest released cumulative year-over-year growth rate of total profits for China's industrial enterprises above a designated size reached 18.8% in Q2 2026, expanding further from the 18.2% recorded in the previous period of the same quarter. Although this figure is slightly lower than the 19% consensus estimate originally projected by Bloomberg, overall profitability has maintained robust double-digit growth for several consecutive months. This indicates that amid a macroeconomic environment facing domestic demand challenges, the industrial manufacturing sector remains the strongest pillar supporting the stabilization of the Chinese economy.

  2. Key Components In terms of specific component performance, industry profitability showed extreme "structural divergence." Benefiting from the explosive boom in global AI infrastructure investment, profits in the manufacturing of computers, communications, and other electronic equipment surged by 103.9%. However, not all industries could share in this dividend. Despite impressive export data, the automobile manufacturing industry saw its profits shrink significantly by 19.8%, dragged down by a fierce domestic price war. Looking solely at single-month data, overall industrial profits grew by 21.1% year-over-year, which is also a deceleration compared to the 24.7% growth rate in the previous month.

  3. In-depth Attribution Regarding the changes in profits, foreign institutions attribute them to a dual-wheel drive of "external demand and new momentum." Reuters and the Financial Post cited analysts noting that the AI investment frenzy has driven strong demand for China's advanced manufacturing products, boosting the profit margins of the tech supply chain. On the other hand, the domestic contradiction of "strong supply and weak demand" has not been fully resolved, as the real estate slump and consumer downgrading continue to severely depress the gross margin performance of downstream traditional manufacturing industries.

  4. Outlook and Risks Looking at the short term (1-2 months), industrial enterprise profits are expected to continue the polarized trend of "hot upstream and high-tech, cold downstream and traditional." As long as the momentum of global tech capital expenditure does not falter, the electronics-related supply chain will remain the core driving force of growth. However, extending into the medium term (3-6 months), if authorities fail to introduce large-scale stimulus policies to reverse the cutthroat price competition in traditional industries such as automakers, coupled with rising tariff barriers from Europe and the US on Chinese exports, the expansion slope of overall industrial profits will face downside risks.

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