Centrally administered SOEs see revenues dive

Xinhua
China's centrally administered state-owned enterprises saw profits and revenues dive during the first quarter, due to multiple factors including the pandemic and oil prices.
Xinhua

China’s centrally administered state-owned enterprises saw profits and revenues dive during the first quarter, due to multiple factors including the novel coronavirus epidemic and slumping oil prices, the country’s state asset regulator said yesterday.

Revenues fell 11.8 percent year on year to 6 trillion yuan (US$857 billion) during the first quarter, while profits plunged 58.8 percent year on year to 130.4 billion yuan, Peng Huagang, spokesman for the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council, told a press conference.

Over 80 percent of central government SOEs reported falling revenues.

It was a “hard-earned result,” as the central SOEs have faced unprecedented challenges such as the coronavirus epidemic and slumping oil prices, Peng said.

The profit and revenue declines will be “short-lived and can be reversed” through effective measures and hard work, he said.

Noting that the country’s economic and social order is steadily returning to normal, Peng said the operations of central SOEs have shown positive signs of improvement.

During the first quarter, the output of crude oil and raw coal produced by central SOEs maintained growth. The value of new contracts signed by construction enterprises increased 3.7 percent year on year, with those of overseas deals surging 18 percent from a year earlier. Investment in key industries has kept steady growth in the first quarter.

 Fixed-asset investment of petrochemical SOEs jumped 12.4 percent year on year, while that of telecommunications SOEs and electricity SOEs grew 12.3 percent and 2 percent.

Most central SOEs fared better in March as the epidemic waned. Revenues were 2.2 trillion yuan last month, recovering to the January level.

So far, 99.4 percent of central SOEs have resumed production.

Solvency of central SOEs remained stable in the first three months. The average debt-to-asset ratio of central SOEs was 65.6 percent by end of March, down 0.1 percentage point year on year.

Central SOEs will endeavor to stabilize operations, bolster supply chains, as well as prevent bankruptcies, dramatic pay cuts and layoffs over the rest of the year, Peng said.

Centrally administered SOEs see revenues dive
Xinhua

Workers at an auto parts factory in Qinhuangdao, north China’s Hebei Province yesterday. China’s centrally administered state-owned enterprises saw profits and revenues dive in the first quarter due to factors including the coronavirus and oil prices.


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