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低基数下的利润修复——7月工业企业效益数据点评(申万宏观·赵伟团队)
申万宏源宏观·2025-08-27 11:42

Core Viewpoint - The profit growth rate continues to recover, but it is largely due to a low base effect, and current cost pressures remain high [3][9][57] Group 1: Profit and Cost Analysis - In July, industrial profits showed a month-on-month increase of 3.3 percentage points to -1.1%, driven by cost and expense rate improvements [3][9] - The cost rate for the consumer manufacturing chain remains at a historical high of 84.2%, while the petrochemical and metallurgy chains also saw increases in cost rates to 85.9% and 86.8% respectively [3][9][57] - Other gains and short-term fluctuations in specific industries significantly constrained monthly profits, particularly in the automotive sector, which experienced a dramatic profit growth decline of 113.7 percentage points to -17.1% [3][18][57] Group 2: Revenue Trends - July revenue showed signs of weakening, particularly in the consumer manufacturing sector, with actual revenue growth declining by 2.6 percentage points to 6.2% year-on-year [4][23][58] - The automotive industry's revenue growth fell by 7.9 percentage points to 4.1%, while the petrochemical and metallurgy sectors experienced slight improvements [4][23][58] Group 3: Future Outlook - Current cost pressures for industrial enterprises remain significant, necessitating ongoing monitoring of the effects of the "anti-involution" policy [4][29][58] - The long-term trend of profit recovery for enterprises is expected to continue, supported by a gradual easing of rigid cost pressures and ongoing recovery in domestic demand [4][29][58] Group 4: Regular Tracking - Industrial enterprise profits have shown a recovery, primarily due to improvements in operating profit margins, with July profits increasing by 2.8 percentage points to -1.5% [5][59] - Revenue growth for industrial enterprises has declined, with significant drops in sectors such as instruments and automobiles, where revenue fell by 9.7% and 7.9% respectively [5][59] - Actual inventory growth has slightly rebounded, particularly in the upstream and midstream sectors, with nominal inventory decreasing by 0.7 percentage points to 2.4% [5][59][44]