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.

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China – Q4 pick-up already fading

China – Q4 pick-up already fading

Headline YoY data are still benefiting from the Q4 pick-up, meaning another 5% growth quarter is likely. But sequentially, growth is slowing again, with no sign of any turnaround in construction that might put a sustainable floor under the overall economy.

2 min read

China – still no sign of property momentum

China – still no sign of property momentum

After a clear improvement from September, property price deflation since December has settled at an annualised pace of around -1.5%. Sluggish mortgage lending isn't pointing to a further recovery from here. On these official data, average prices are now down 6% from the peak in 2021.

1 min read

Taiwan – the macro case for the TWD

Taiwan – the macro case for the TWD

A video bringing together the arguments I have been making for the last few months on how the economic factors that that helped anchor the TWD in its tight 28-33 range from the late 1990s are now changing.

2 min read

China – no upside surprise in monetary data

China – no upside surprise in monetary data

Today's monetary data continue to suggest that the economy has bottomed, but don't point to a big recovery. Non-state and mortgage lending have stopped deteriorating, but don't show signs of the sort of recovery that would lift economic activity.

1 min read

Korea – structural labour market looseness

Korea – structural labour market looseness

Unemployment remains low, but wage growth isn't accelerating. The reason is the big structural changes in the labour market of recent years, which have increased the number of part-time jobs. That shift is likely to reduce the bargaining power of labour, and generate a structural slowdown in wages.

2 min read

Japan – sentiment takes another step down

Japan – sentiment takes another step down

Tariffs are reinforcing the hit from rising prices, causing a sharp fall in corporate confidence in the April EW survey. Household sentiment was stable, but USDJPY rising back to 150 means downside risk. That keeps rate hikes on the agenda, though the BOJ would clearly like tariffs to fall first.

3 min read

Taiwan – structure, cycle and the TWD

Taiwan – structure, cycle and the TWD

The market sees TWD moves as a function of US pressure and lifers. The CBC says it is all about exporters. I see a step-change in exports from 2020 that has ended deflation and exacerbated the CA surplus. The TWD consequences of that shift are stronger if US tariffs don't trigger a global recession.

6 min read

Korea – minutes show cuts ahead

Korea – minutes show cuts ahead

Today's 10D May export data were stable, but that won't ease the growth concerns visible in last week's minutes of the BOK April meeting. It seems the member who voted for a cut was weighing more than 25bp. But another member warned against being "bold", saying that monetary easing wasn't working.

3 min read

China – inflation stuck

China – inflation stuck

After the deflation of much of 2024, core sequential inflation has now been positive for six months. But it is now still only +0.2% annualised, and doesn't look to be going higher. Indicators for PPI suggest even more deflation ahead, with the one exception being the decline in the USD.

2 min read

Charts

Charts