The company inteneded to apply to the stock exchange to remove the delisting warning.
The turnaround follows the appointment last July of Bao Xiufei, a former sales executive at Royal FrieslandCampina China to head the company under chairman and company founder Xie (Sam) Hong.
Beingmate has had a recent history of not meeting its guidance but the preliminary accounts suggest its reporting systems have improved.
In December the company forecast net profit of between 28m and 78m yuan and described "green shoots" appearing.
When Bao was appointed the company said his key tasks were to unlock Beingmate's distribution network and take the right actions to meet Chinese customer's preferences for net profit.
Beinmate shares have gained some ground after hitting a record low of 3.95 yuan in October and last traded at 5.72 yuan, valuing the company at 5.84b (NZ$1.28b).
Still, it's a long way from the 18 yuan that Fonterra paid for its 18.8 per cent stake in 2014.
Fonterra paid about $755 million for its Beingmate shares, while the latter paid A$102m for a 51 per cent stake in the Darnum manufacturing plant in Australia. That joint venture has now been unwound with the deal structured to ensure no cash was paid by Fonterra to Beingmate.
Fonterra has been reviewing its overseas businesses having written down the carrying value of its Beingmate investment to just $204m.
Late last year Great Wall, one of China's four national asset management companies, signed a strategic partnership with Beingmate, taking a 5.09% stake in the company.