East Asia Econ
The platform for tracking and understanding East Asia macro
Latest analysis
Last week, next week
In what was a very eventful few days, two developments last week stood out for me: the cuts in US tariffs on China, and the call in the FYP plan for more consumption. Both continue the turn for the better in China sentiment. The upturn in Korea isn't yet supported by a stronger labour market.
Japan – BOJ cautious on exports, confident on wages
Today there were the usual month-end data releases of retail sales, the labour market, and construction, as well as Tokyo October CPI. More interesting was the BOJ's full outlook report, analysing exports, capex resilience, food prices and consumption, as well as wages and prices.
China – weak official PMIs, other indicators better
With the official manufacturing PMI dropping to a two-year low in October, it is clear China's cycle continues to struggle. The offset is the improvement in the S&P/RatingDog versions (at least through September), and the better CKGSB survey this month.
China – shifts in financing, but not quite what is wanted
The PBC's quarterly surveys cover firms and banks too, but I think the household version is most interesting. In Q3, household sentiment is weak, but mixed. Price expectations are very soft. Some of the savings data support the idea that China's economy is near a structural turning point.
Korea – business sentiment turning
After last month's puzzling fall, business sentiment bounced in October. With the diffusion across sectors still rising, it seems reasonable to expect a further rise in sentiment towards neutral. But there still are headwinds to recovery: construction and real estate, exports, and the labour market.
Korea – inconclusive data
With yesterday's loan officer survey, and today's release of consumer confidence and GDP, there is lots to dig into. There are some important takeaways, but overall, the releases don't provide clarity on the two big issues facing the economy: house prices, and the outlook for growth.
Japan – services PPI ticks up in September
The steady drop in services PPI inflation stabilised in September, with core ticking up to 2.9% YoY. The data aren't good enough to prove the decline is now over, but I do think a floor should be close. Lumpiness in the data suggests a short-term bounce, and the labour market remains tight.
China – no cuts in export prices
China has now released trade price and volume data for September. They show export volumes holding up despite tariffs, and that isn't because of price cuts. The recent mild upturn in import demand has also sustained. That calls into question the sharp fall in last week's FAI data.
Last week, next week
Trump's visit will dominate the news this week, particularly his trade talks with China and Korea, and whether he says anything about the JPY in Japan. It now doesn't look like the BOJ will hike on Thursday, but the tone should be more positive. The data highlight will be Korean business confidence.
Japan – another noisy month for CPI
National inflation data for September was messy again. One reason was public service prices falling, a development that stands out when a theme of recent BOJ speeches has been pent-up inflation pressure in the public sector. Overall, the inflation picture still looks solid.
China – three shifts in underlying monetary data
Detailed monetary data for China continue to look more positive. Three trends stand out: a further slowing of the flow of household money into time deposits; a resumption of capital inflows; and continuation of the faster pace of PBC lending to the financial sector.