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Analysis

Tariffs bite, deflation drags: China’s factory profits plunge in margin meltdown

China’s industrial profit picture just took another hit, and it’s a bruiser. Profits slid 9.1% in May—the sharpest drop since last October—underscoring how U.S. tariffs and persistent deflationary undertows are gnawing away at the country’s manufacturing margins. The overall year-to-date number is still in the red at –1.1%, and the momentum is clearly rolling downhill.

Auto manufacturers are bearing the brunt, with profits down nearly 12% as the price war in EVs and traditional vehicles shows no sign of easing. The mix of oversupply, softening demand, and growing trade friction has turned the sector into a margin graveyard. It’s a red flag not just for company earnings but for broader industrial confidence—investment and hiring decisions are going to feel that chill.

What’s striking is that this profit contraction is coming even as industrial output rose 5.8% in May. So the top line might be growing, but the pricing power just isn’t there—classic margin compression, and a clear sign that deflationary forces are still embedded in the system.

Some bright spots do exist—equipment makers and appliance producers are seeing healthy gains, thanks to Beijing’s upgrade subsidy program—but they’re not nearly enough to offset the broader pressure.

Mining remains the laggard by a mile, with profits down 29% year-on-year through May. Coal and metal processors have been particularly battered, and the damage is bleeding straight through to the state-owned sector, which dominates the upstream economy.

Bottom line: this isn’t just a soft patch, it’s structural stress. Beijing may have paused the worst of the trade fight with Washington, but the tariff scars are showing—and unless demand picks up or pricing stabilizes, the pressure on margins and business sentiment will linger. Expect the policy calls for fresh stimulus to get louder.

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