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Paul Cavey

Paul Cavey

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

A longer report addressing three misconceptions with Japan's fiscal position. Also, yet another month of very strong export data for Taiwan. The driver is the sale of semiconductors to the US. In November, the bilateral trade surplus with the US reached 25% of Taiwan's GDP.

2 min read

Taiwan – the export surge continues

Taiwan – the export surge continues

There is little growth in exports outside of tech in general, and semiconductors specifically. But the surge in chip exports is big enough to offset all the weakness in other products. The overall trade surplus eased back in November, but the bilateral surplus with the US reached 25% of Taiwan GDP.

2 min read

Japan – overcoming fiscal fear

Japan – overcoming fiscal fear

The supplementary budget looks big, but this year's fiscal deficit is still budgeted to narrow. Gross debt is high, but the government's net liabilities have fallen. Interest rates have risen, but before Takaichi took office, net annual interest payments by the government had fallen to near zero.

6 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

China's exports rebounded in November, and so did the trade surplus. In Japan, there is lots of data to discuss today: the second release of Q3 GDP, EW survey, wage growth and BOP. There are some mixed messages, but one theme is stabilising real wages and stronger household confidence.

2 min read

Japan – real wages stop falling

Japan – real wages stop falling

A few releases today – October wages and CA, November Economy Watchers survey, and Q3 revised GDP. The overall picture is mixed, though the acceleration in inflation and drop in real wages into early 2025 has now stabilised, and that is allowing an improvement in household sentiment.

3 min read

China – exports up again

China – exports up again

The weakness in exports of October reversed in November, with a rebound in growth to ROW, and shipments to the US stabilising. Auto shipments reached a new all-time high, and are growing as quickly this year as in the initial take-off in 2023-24. Import demand declined, so the trade surplus rose.

2 min read

Last week, next week

Last week, next week

Regional themes: lessening deflation in China, but no sign of real recovery; the BOJ is likely to hike this month, but the JPY needs a hawkish hike; outflows into overseas equities in Korea change usual exchange rate relationships; inflation risks in Korea and Taiwan if AI chip demand is sustained

7 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

Today's data show another surge in overseas equity buying in Korea, consumption in Japan that is quite strong considering the headwinds of population decline and real income squeeze, and inflation in Taiwan which has now fallen to 1.2%, but I don't expect will drop much further.

3 min read

Korea – more huge overseas equity buying

Korea – more huge overseas equity buying

The big shift in Korea's BOP since 2020 has been the rise in overseas buying of equities. That outflow surged anew in October to a record high, and by offsetting the large current account surplus, has helped keep $KRW near record highs.

2 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

In advance of next week's release of CPI and PPI data in China, some thoughts on the outlook, which I think shows a lessening deflation. Also, an update on visitor arrivals in the region (strong in Japan, weak in Taiwan), and weekly flow data in Japan.

2 min read

China – lessening deflation

China – lessening deflation

High-frequency data show upstream prices remained stable in November, while food prices have been rising. The combination points to a further lessening of headline deflation. I doubt that signals a real turn in nominal growth, though there are now some upside risks.

2 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

China's November S&P services PMI didn't confirm the weakness seen in the official version. S&P today also released its services PMI for Japan. That sent the same message as other sentiment surveys: far from weakening, economic momentum in Japan is improving. Also today, my latest video and podcast.

2 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

Japan's consumers like what they are seeing of Sanae Takaichi, with another bounce in confidence in November. That removes another reason for BOJ caution. In Korea, inflation remains at around 2%, but services inflation – a better measure of domestically generated price pressures – is higher.

2 min read

Korea – core inflation stable, but not low

Korea  – core inflation stable, but not low

The BOK says the rise in headline CPI inflation to 2.4% the last couple of months is temporary, and that core is stable. That isn't an unreasonable assessment. However, I'd continue to highlight the strength of services inflation, which remains firm reltive to ongoing labour market weakness.

2 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

The big policy event today was BOJ Governor Ueda's speech, which further increased the likelihood of a near-term hike. In terms of data, Japan released quarterly profits data (strong in non-manufacturing) and weak PMIs for the region contrasted with strong semiconductor export data for Korea.

2 min read

Region – manufacturing PMIs and Korean exports

Region – manufacturing PMIs and Korean exports

The mfg PMIs across the region mainly remain below 50. That shows that conditions outside of semiconductors remain poor. Semi is strong, and in Korean in export data for November, are departing from a normal cycle. Goods input prices pressures are rebounding, reflecting weak currencies.

3 min read

Japan – Ueda becomes constructive again

Japan – Ueda becomes constructive again

The tone of governor Ueda's speech today suggests a rate hike is close. He claims that risks to the US are receding, identifies five recent positive wage developments, and with firms' price and wage behaviour changing, argues that exchange rate changes are more likely to affect prices.

5 min read

Last week, next week

Last week, next week

The main themes: stabilisation in China, but the picture is muddy; the discrepancy between clear economic boom in Taiwan versus stability in inflation and TWD; upside risks in Korea that still look like risks than reality; the BOJ facing a real fiscal boost when the economy is already recovering.

7 min read

China – more data puzzles

China – more data puzzles

The official composite output PMI in November fell below 50. That wasn't because of FAI: the industrial PMIs were stable. Rather, it was weakness in services. That is puzzling. For now, the one concrete indicator from today's inflation is actually positive: deflation isn't getting worse.

3 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

Today's charts cover October services trade and the implications for China's GDP growth in Q4; Tokyo inflation (showing stronger rents), and retail sales in Japan; weak October activity in Korea; and yet another round of strong GDP data in Taiwan.

3 min read

Taiwan – everything revised up, except inflation

Taiwan – everything revised up, except inflation

In today's GDP release, the government raised estimated growth for Q1, Q2, and Q3. The FY forecast was raised by almost 3ppts to 7.4%. But because of AI, officials remain bullish about the outlook, and so raised the forecast for 2026 as well, And yet, none of this is expected to impact inflation.

3 min read

Korea – still no clear lift in growth

Korea – still no clear lift in growth

The BOK's revisions to the GDP outlook yesterday were modest. But in today's October output data, there's little sign of any improvement at all. The data are affected by the long Chuseok holiday, and will likely look better through year-end. Still, it is clear the economy still faces headwinds.

2 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

The big event today was the BOK meeting. The bank was a bit more constructive on the outlook, but data that was separately released show labour market conditions remaining weak. Elsewhere, profits in China are flat-lining, exports in Japan aren't dropping, and macro data in Taiwan remain strong.

3 min read

Korea – was when, now also whether

Korea – was when, now also whether

The BOK didn't raise growth forecasts above potential, but still signalled some concern about the resilience of inflation. That sounds a touch stagflationary, and was used to justify a step back from its loosening stance. Growth only gets above potential in its chip-driven upside scenario.

3 min read