China’s industrial profits post steepest drop in over a year, raising 2026 stimulus pressure
China's industrial profit slump intensifies pressure for 2026 fiscal stimulus, highlighting systemic economic challenges and policy urgency. The post China’s industrial profits post steepest drop in over a year, raising 2026 stimulus pressure appeared first on Crypto Briefing.

China’s industrial profits post steepest drop in over a year, raising 2026 stimulus pressure A 13.1% year-on-year plunge in November signals deepening stress in the world's second-largest economy Share Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 27, 2026 China’s industrial sector just had a bad November, and the numbers make it hard to pretend otherwise.
Industrial profits fell 13.1% year-on-year last month, the largest single-month decline in 14 months, according to data released December 27 by China’s National Bureau of Statistics. To put that in sequence: October was already rough, with a 5.
5% drop. November made October look like a warm-up. The cumulative picture is even more telling.
Profits across industrial firms for the first eleven months of 2025 grew just 0.1% year-on-year. That’s down sharply from the 1.
9% gain recorded through October, meaning November’s damage was severe enough to nearly wipe out everything the sector had built up over the prior ten months. Advertisement What’s dragging profits down Two forces are doing most of the damage here: weak domestic demand and factory-gate deflation. The data covers firms with annual revenue of at least 20 million RMB, roughly $2.
85 million, so this isn’t capturing corner shops. These are established industrial operations, and the breadth of the decline suggests the pressure is systemic rather than isolated. There are bright spots, but they’re narrow.
Automotive profits rose 7.5% from January through November, and high-tech manufacturing surged 10.0% over the same period.
The problem is that two outperforming sectors don’t fix an economy-wide profit contraction when everything else is moving the wrong way. Policy promises without a playbook Beijing has signaled it intends to lean on fiscal policy in 2026. Policymakers have publicly committed to proactive fiscal support, the kind of language that typically precedes infrastructure spending, consumption subsidies, or targeted industrial incentives.
What they haven’t done yet is publish the actual measures. The fact that cumulative profit growth essentially flatlined at 0.1% for the year’s first eleven months, after being on a modest upward trajectory through October, creates real political pressure to act before the 2025 annual figures are finalized and published.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy. MACRO China’s industrial profits post steepest drop in over a year, raising 2026 stimulus pressure A 13.
1% year-on-year plunge in November signals deepening stress in the world's second-largest economy by Editorial Team Jun. 27, 2026 Share Add us on Google China’s industrial sector just had a bad November, and the numbers make it hard to pretend otherwise. Industrial profits fell 13.
1% year-on-year last month, the largest single-month decline in 14 months, according to data released December 27 by China’s National Bureau of Statistics. To put that in sequence: October was already rough, with a 5.5% drop.
November made October look like a warm-up. The cumulative picture is even more telling. Profits across industrial firms for the first eleven months of 2025 grew just 0.
1% year-on-year. That’s down sharply from the 1.9% gain recorded through October, meaning November’s damage was severe enough to nearly wipe out everything the sector had built up over the prior ten months.
Advertisement What’s dragging profits down Two forces are doing most of the damage here: weak domestic demand and factory-gate deflation. The data covers firms with annual revenue of at least 20 million RMB, roughly $2.85 million, so this isn’t capturing corner shops.
These are established industrial operations, and the breadth of the decline suggests the pressure is systemic rather than isolated. There are bright spots, but they’re narrow. Automotive profits rose 7.
5% from January through November, and high-tech manufacturing surged 10.0% over the same period. The problem is that two outperforming sectors don’t fix an economy-wide profit contraction when everything else is moving the wrong way.
Policy promises without a playbook Beijing has signaled it intends to lean on fiscal policy in 2026. Policymakers have publicly committed to proactive fiscal support, the kind of language that typically precedes infrastructure spending, consumption subsidies, or targeted industrial incentives. What they haven’t done yet is publish the actual measures.
The fact that cumulative profit growth essentially flatlined at 0.1% for the year’s first eleven months, after being on a modest upward trajectory through October, creates real political pressure to act before the 2025 annual figures are finalized and published. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team.
For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.
Đọc thêm từ Tiền số / Crypto

Belgium thrashes New Zealand 5-1 as crypto prediction markets and fan tokens ride the World Cup wave
The surge in crypto prediction markets and fan tokens during the World Cup highlights a growing intersection of sports and digital finance, influencing fan engagement and investment strategies. The post Belgium thrashes New Zealand 5-1 as crypto prediction markets and fan tokens

Elijah Just’s late World Cup goal against Belgium sends ripples through crypto prediction markets
Crypto prediction markets gain traction as sports betting emerges as a potential mainstream use case, despite regulatory challenges. The post Elijah Just’s late World Cup goal against Belgium sends ripples through crypto prediction markets appeared first on Crypto Briefing.

Polymarket Traders Wager on Strategy’s STRC Reclaiming Par as Critics Call It a ‘Junk Bond’
STRC’s collapse below par has sparked intense debate as Strategy’s variable-rate preferred stock struggles beneath the $75 mark. Yet Polymarket bettors still see a path back, wagering that the stock will eventually reclaim its intended price, though not anytime soon. Few Companie

Chainlink’s CRE selected by DTCC for collateral management and Pangea for FX settlement
Chainlink's partnerships with DTCC and Pangea could revolutionize financial infrastructure, enhancing efficiency and security in global markets. The post Chainlink’s CRE selected by DTCC for collateral management and Pangea for FX settlement appeared first on Crypto Briefing.