China’s industrial profits surge 24.7% in April amid AI demand and oil prices

1 hour ago 1



China’s industrial profit machine just posted its most impressive monthly figure in recent memory. April’s 24.7% year-on-year increase marks a sharp acceleration from an already strong first quarter, powered by two forces that rarely push in the same direction: surging AI-related demand and rising crude oil prices.

The number builds on a trend that’s been gaining momentum all year. March saw industrial profits climb 15.8% year-on-year, up from 15.2% across January and February. The full first quarter delivered a 15.5% increase, with total profits hitting approximately 1.696 trillion yuan, roughly $247.3B.

AI and semiconductors are doing the heavy lifting

High-tech manufacturing, particularly semiconductors and robotics, has been the standout performer. Global appetite for AI hardware continues to grow at a pace that makes even optimistic forecasts look conservative. Chinese manufacturers positioned in the AI supply chain are capturing a significant share of that demand, and it’s showing up directly in their bottom lines.

Equipment manufacturing has been another bright spot, benefiting from both domestic infrastructure investment and export orders tied to automation and intelligent systems.

Mining has also shared in the profitability, though for different reasons. Energy supply sectors, by contrast, have faced headwinds.

Oil prices: a double-edged sword

Crude oil prices have climbed to between $100 and $106 per barrel, driven largely by geopolitical unrest in the Middle East. For China’s petrochemical and refining sectors, higher prices translate directly into higher revenue. For everyone buying energy as an input cost, the math works in the opposite direction.

What this means for investors

China’s industrial economy is increasingly bifurcated between old-economy sectors dealing with cost pressures and new-economy sectors riding a generational technology wave. The semiconductor and AI equipment segments look like the clearest beneficiaries, with demand showing up in actual profit figures, quarter after quarter, with accelerating momentum.

One notable absence in all the coverage of China’s industrial profit surge: there’s essentially zero crossover with crypto markets. No mentions of digital assets, blockchain technologies, or tokenized commodities appear in the financial reporting around these figures.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Read Entire Article