Japan business confidence slips in June survey: BoJ

03 Jul 2018  2059 | World Travel News

An employee at Toyota’s Motomachi plant in Aichi prefecture, Japan. Reuters

TOKYO (AFP) – Confidence among Japan’s biggest manufacturers has slipped for the second straight quarter, a key central bank survey showed yesterday.

The Bank of Japan’s Tankan report – a quarterly survey of about 10,000 companies – showed a reading of 21 among major manufacturers in its June survey against 24 in the March report.

The latest Tankan, however, hardly made economists pessimistic about the world’s third largest economy, with the headline index still close to its highest level in over a decade.

The Tankan report, the broadest indicator of how Japan Inc is faring, marks the difference between the percentage of firms that are upbeat and those that see conditions as unfavourable.

The latest reading is slightly lower than market expectations of 22, according to data compiled by Bloomberg News.

“The second straight quarterly decline is certainly not good, but the level of (business confidence) is still high,” Yoshiki Shinke, chief economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute, told AFP.

“We are not facing a recession phase, but the pace of economic expansion is slowing down,” he said.

The survey came after solid job market-linked data released on Friday, including Japan’s jobless rate in May that slumped to a 26-year low.

Confidence fell among motor vehicle makers and electronics makers as the average predicted yen rate for the business year from April appreciated to 107.26 yen to the dollar in the latest survey from 109.66 yen predicted in March.

A strong yen is negative for Japanese exporters as it makes their products less competitive abroad and erodes profits when repatriated.

“Decline in the auto sector – even though their sales are strong – reflects geopolitical risks” including US President Donald Trump’s threat of tariffs, Mr Shinke said.

And yet, concerns over protectionist policies “so far have not affected plans of capital investment nor demand-supply conditions,” he added.

The sentiment among iron and steelmakers, and among nonferrous metals makers also slipped, amid lingering worries over the US move to impose hefty tariffs on steel and aluminium.

The index for non-manufacturers edged up to 24 from 23, the first rise in the past four quarters, or since a year ago.

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