China's September industrial profits surge most in nearly six years

Profits for China’s industrial powerhouses surged the most in nearly six years in September as a government crackdown on air pollution sparked fears of winter supply shortages and sent prices of finished goods like steel and copper sharply higher.
Sustained earnings growth will give China’s policymakers more room to restructure bloated and often inefficient state-owned enterprises, which dominate the industrial landscape and account for a hefty portion of the country’s corporate debt.
Industrial profits in September rose 27.7 per cent from a year earlier to 662.18 billion yuan (US$99.46 billion), accelerating from a 24 per cent jump in August, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on its website on Friday.
That was the sharpest gain since December 2011, when profits grew 31.5 per cent.
For the first nine months of the year, the firms notched up profits of 5.58 trillion yuan, a 22.8 per cent jump from the same period last year and up a touch from 21.6 per cent growth in January-August.