East Asia Econ

Welcome

Welcome to EAST ASIA ECON, a research service run from Taipei by Paul Cavey, and specializing in the markets and macro of China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan.

We cover all the major data releases, as well as providing weekly and monthly summaries. We also devote a lot of time to thematic work, aiming to understand development patterns across the region, and to find common investment themes.

The analysis is founded on an on-the-ground knowledge gained from thirty years experience living, travelling and working in the region. We also have a very strong data infrastructure, built by directly accessing official sources, and made available to subscribers via a comprehensive range of interactive charts and a data app.

We don't think you'll find coverage that is as comprehensive and rounded anywhere else. The articles and charts below give a flavor of the work we are doing. There is a lot more on the home pages of the individual economies.

Signing up here will ensure you receive occassional emails that give you a taste of what we do. If you work in a financial institution and are interested in subscribing to our full service, please get in touch for a trial. Special access is also available for academics.

Contact Us Sign Up

China – credit both too weak and too strong

China – credit both too weak and too strong

Cyclically, credit is very weak, especially private sector borrowing. But credit is still rising relative to GDP. That's partly because of government borrowing. But it is also because of weak nominal GDP growth, and that is unlikely to change until the sharp fall in M1 relative to M2 reverses.

1 min read

China – exports drop in September

China – exports drop in September

Exports dropped quite sharply in September. China is still making share gains in autos especially, but this is another sign that the best of the recovery in the regional export cycle is probably now done. That matters for China when exports have been the strongest sector of the economy.

1 min read

Last week, next week

Last week, next week

A summary of what happened on East Asia Econ last week, and what to look for in the next seven days.

5 min read

China – core deflation worsens

China – core deflation worsens

Core inflation, which took one step-down during covid, has this year dropped again. Indeed, China has now been in sequential core CPI deflation since May. This implies rising real interest rates, and, with PPI turning down again too, a worsening debt burden.

2 min read

Korea – right, for some of the wrong reasons

Korea – right, for some of the wrong reasons

As expected, the BOK's cut on Friday was hawkish. However, while I thought the bank would express some concern about services inflation, its only worry seems to be that lower rates will give a new boost to real estate. If housing is calm, the consensus will thus expect rates to fall further.

2 min read

Japan – incomes up, but still not enough

Japan – incomes up, but still not enough

There was a decent bounce in per capita household incomes through Q2. But the rise in consumption was smaller, with better incomes fuelling stronger savings rather than much more spending. The Q2 BOJ consumer survey shows the big worry at the household level remains the high level of prices.

2 min read

China – 4/10

China – 4/10

The MOF presser today was underwhelming, in both quantity and quality. The one real, positive change is allowing fiscal funds to be used to address the supply overhang in property, but only at the local government level (and, it seems, using existing funds). Markets are unlikely to be impressed.

2 min read

Korea – a peak more than a pivot

Korea – a peak more than a pivot

There is a broad consensus that the BOK will cut this Friday. I wouldn't push back strongly against that expectation. But I don't think the bank can be too doveish when private services inflation – a proxy for domestically generated inflation – has been rebounding back above 2%.

3 min read

Japan – EW and wages remain firm

Japan – EW and wages remain firm

Data continue to show little change in the constructive economic assessment that the BOJ was talking about in 1H24. The Economy Watchers survey for September ticked down, but is well above the LT average, and the outlook score is higher still. Growth in underlying wages remains firm.

2 min read

China – what if property is for speculation (part 2)?

China – what if property is for speculation (part 2)?

My base case - that the economy won't turnaround without fiscal – isn't especially differentiated. But the reports of stronger real estate sales in the holiday highlight a risk case: that the equity rally mobilises household savings and boosts price expectations, lifting the economy without fiscal.

5 min read

Last week, next week

Last week, next week

A summary of what happened on East Asia Econ last week, and what to look for in the next seven days.

5 min read

China – has the Fed really been a constraint?

China – has the Fed really been a constraint?

I had an op-ed piece in today's Nikkei Asia. The headline argument is that monetary policy isn't sufficient to boost growth. On its own, that isn't much of a differentiated view. The nuance is the reasoning: China has monetary policy independence, so Fed cuts in themselves don't change anything.

5 min read

Charts

Charts