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China's economic recovery
EconomyChina Economy

China’s corporate earnings lag behind stock market gains, survey finds

Equities post strong gains driven by improved market sentiment and tech optimism, though profit growth lags, a new survey shows

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Investor sentiment towards equities remains broadly positive in China, with about 63.8 per cent of respondents to a new CKGSB survey expecting A-shares to rise over the next year. Photo: Getty Images
Karen Tianin Beijing

Chinese listed companies have delivered strong stock returns over the past year even as net profits grew by only about 1 per cent, suggesting the gains were driven more by higher valuations than corporate earnings, according to a quarterly investor survey released by the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business (CKGSB).

Net profit growth turned positive at about 1 per cent on a trailing 12-month basis to the first quarter of 2026, while price-to-earnings ratios rose 31.2 per cent, the survey showed. Total equity-market returns reached 32.5 per cent over the same period.

Liu Jing, a professor of accounting and finance at CKGSB, said market turnover had recovered sharply, pointing to more active trading and stronger investor optimism despite only modest earnings growth.
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“If we want a long-term bull market, fundamentals ultimately have to start growing,” Liu said at a briefing on Wednesday.

Investor sentiment towards equities remained broadly positive. About 63.8 per cent of respondents expected A-shares to rise over the coming year, up 1.4 percentage points from the previous survey period, while 62.1 per cent expected Hong Kong equities to gain, up 1 percentage point.

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The survey covered 2,100 financial professionals and retail investors nationwide.

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