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2011年10月2日日曜日

Japan's Industrial Output Rises Less Than Expected, Weighed by Strong Yen - Bloomberg

Enlarge image It’s 1987 Without the Bubble in Japan It’s 1987 Without the Bubble in Japan Commuters crowd a train station in Tokyo. Employers cut payrolls by 160,000 and a further 200,000 workers retired or abandoned efforts to find a job, leaving the seasonally adjusted number of employed at 59.4 million.

Commuters crowd a train station in Tokyo. Employers cut payrolls by 160,000 and a further 200,000 workers retired or abandoned efforts to find a job, leaving the seasonally adjusted number of employed at 59.4 million. Photographer: Toshiyuki Aizawa/Bloomberg

Japan's Economy, Financial Markets, Government Sept. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Curtis Freeze, founder of Honolulu-based Prospect Asset Management Inc., talks about Japan's economy, financial markets, and government. Freeze speaks from Tokyo with John Dawson on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)

Japan’s labor force shrank last month to its smallest size since October 1987, when the nation’s stock-market benchmark was 185 percent higher and land prices were 85 percent greater than today.

Employers cut payrolls by 160,000 and a further 200,000 workers retired or abandoned efforts to find a job, leaving the seasonally adjusted number of employed at 59.4 million, the statistics bureau said today in Tokyo. Separate figures showed industrial production rose 0.8 percent from the previous month, less than all but three of 28 forecasts in a Bloomberg survey.

The data deepen concern that Japan’s recovery from the March earthquake will be stunted by manufacturers shifting operations abroad because of gains in the yen, a deterioration in consumer confidence and prospects for higher taxes at home. The challenges add to the burden of an economy already beset by a shrinking and aging population.

“We’ve seen an acceleration in the hollowing out of industry this year with the yen’s surge and the earthquake,” said Hiroshi Miyazaki, chief economist at Shinkin Asset Management Co. in Tokyo. “The government doesn’t have a sense of crisis about the yen and emerging economies are luring Japanese companies away.”

The yen traded at 76.74 as of 9:12 a.m. in London, about 1 percent from the post-World War II record high of 75.95 on Aug. 19. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average finished little changed at 8,700.29, compared with the peak of 38,915.87 when it closed out 1989, capping a four-year run when it soared almost 200 percent.

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda’s government on Sept. 27 said it will start implementing measures to cope with the yen’s gains, including subsidies for companies struggling to retain workers. Finance Minister Jun Azumi said today that Japan plans to bolster funds needed to intervene and lengthen monitoring of foreign-exchange market positions until the end of the year, from an initial plan to end the review this month.

“The yen staying around the high-70s could throw cold water on the Japanese economy’s recovery trend,” Azumi said at a press conference in Tokyo. “We will take bold actions when needed and we don’t rule out taking any necessary measures while closely monitoring speculative trading.”

Manufacturers including Panasonic Corp. have announced plans to shift operations overseas. Panasonic, one of the world’s largest consumer electronics companies, is moving the headquarters of its $57 billion procurement operation to Singapore from Osaka in the year starting April 2012, Masaaki Fujita, an executive in charge of the business, said this month.

Exports and retail sales data released this month also missed analysts forecasts, casting doubt on whether gross domestic product will rebound as much as forecast this quarter. GDP is expected to grow at a 4.6 percent annual pace in the three months through September, ending three quarters of decline, according to the average forecast of 42 economists surveyed by Japan’s government-affiliated Economic Planning Association.

The jobless rate fell to 4.3 percent in August from 4.7 percent as people left the workforce, today’s report showed. Household spending decreased 4.1 percent from a year earlier, compared with the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey for a 2.8 percent drop.

A stagnating economy has also depressed consumer sentiment, with the nation’s Economy Watchers survey showing confidence among merchants and others who deal with consumers slipping to 47.3 in August, the first drop since March.

“I’m worried where things will go after this year, when we’ll start to see more of an impact from the strong yen and slowing growth in the U.S.,” said Noriaki Matsuoka, an economist at Daiwa Asset Management Co. in Tokyo. Reconstruction won’t be enough to fuel a “V-shaped rebound,” he said.

Japan plans to spend a total of 19 trillion yen ($247 billion) over five years for rebuilding after the magnitude-9 temblor and tsunami that devastated the northeast coast. The nation’s ruling Democratic Party of Japan this week proposed a 9.2 trillion yen temporary tax increase and selling of state assets to help pay for the effort.

In a sign that weaker global demand is affecting other Asian markets, South Korea’s industrial production also rose less than economist estimates in August, gaining 4.8 percent from a year earlier, Statistics Korea said today. Meanwhile, a gauge of Chinese manufacturing shrank for a third month in September, the longest contraction since 2009, according to the purchasing managers’ index released by HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics today.

“Continuing yen strength will prompt companies to factor in a stronger yen in their business planning,” said Takahiro Sekido, a former analyst at the Bank of Japan and now a chief economist at Credit Agricole SA in Tokyo. “The biggest concern is the European debt crisis and the U.S. economy. With uncertain overseas demand,” Japan’s recovery may weaken, he said.

The International Monetary Fund predicted “severe” repercussions if Europe fails to contain its debt crisis or U.S. policy makers deadlock over a fiscal overhaul. Deepening debt woes in Europe have also put pressure on the yen’s exchange rate against its European counterpart, threatening to depress earnings at companies including Sony Corp.

To contact the reporter on this story: Aki Ito in Tokyo at aito16@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Panckhurst at ppanckhurst@bloomberg.net


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2011年10月1日土曜日

Japan Output Continues Recovery, but Outlook Murky - Wall Street Journal

TOKYO—Japanese industrial production continued to bounce back after the devastating impact of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, rising for the fifth-straight month in August as the transportation, steel and electronic component sectors regained their footing.

WSJ's Andrew Monahan discusses Japan's industrial production figures, up for the 5th straight month in August. Global economic conditions, however, could prove challenging for Japan's economy in the coming months. Photo: REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

But the outlook for production over the next few months remains murky as the yen's strength, the financial crisis in the euro zone and a slowdown in the U.S. economy pose a threat to Japan's fragile recovery.

Output rose a seasonally adjusted 0.8% in August from the previous month, data from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry showed on Friday.

While the ministry said industrial production has now almost completely recovered from the effects of the earthquake and tsunami, the result was below a median forecast for a 1.5% rise in a survey of economists by Dow Jones Newswires and the Nikkei. In July, production rose 0.4% from the previous month.

In a sign there may be a bumpy road ahead for production in the coming months, manufacturers polled by the ministry expect their orders to fall 2.5% in September, and climb 3.8% in October.

Manufacturers have now largely overcome post-quake production disruptions and the threat of power shortages due to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear crisis and analysts are now focusing on how Japan will cope with the economic turmoil overseas as well as the yen's appreciation.

"External factors affected production negatively...the yen's strength was also a negative factor," Japan Research Institute chief economist Hidehiko Fujii said about Friday's output data. Still, the outlook for the Japanese economy may not change much, he added.

Other data released on Friday painted a similar picture of Japan's economy recovering from the impact of the March 11 disasters.

Japan's unemployment rate fell to 4.3% in August from 4.7% in July, improving for the first time in three months. But an official briefing reporters on the data noted that the drop in the figure does not necessarily mean an improvement in the labor market.

Meanwhile, the nation's core consumer price index rose for the second-straight month in August, partly due to an increase in energy prices.

The nation's core CPI rose 0.2% from a year earlier in the month, data from the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communication showed, higher than the median forecast for a 0.1% gain in a poll of economists surveyed by Dow Jones and the Nikkei.

Core CPI for the Tokyo metropolitan area—an early indicator of price trends for the rest of Japan—fell 0.1% on year in September. In August, it declined 0.2%.

Write to Andrew Monahan at andrew.monahan@dowjones.net


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2011年8月31日水曜日

Industrial Output Signals Slowdown - Wall Street Journal

See correction below.

Industrial production in Japan and South Korea fell short of expectations in July, the latest sign Asia's manufacturing sector may be losing momentum due to softening U.S. and European demand.

Japanese industrial output in July was up 0.6% from the previous month, a fourth straight month of expansion, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry said Wednesday. But the median forecast of economists by Nikkei and Dow Jones Newswires was 1.5%.

Japanese companies surveyed by the ministry said on average they expect to cut production by 2.4% in September after a 2.8% increase in August.

In Korea, ...

See correction below.

Industrial production in Japan and South Korea fell short of expectations in July, the latest sign Asia's manufacturing sector may be losing momentum due to softening U.S. and European demand.

Japanese industrial output in July was up 0.6% from the previous month, a fourth straight month of expansion, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry said Wednesday. But the median forecast of economists by Nikkei and Dow Jones Newswires was 1.5%.

Japanese companies surveyed by the ministry said on average they expect to cut production by 2.4% in September after a 2.8% increase in August.

In Korea, ...


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