The Sun (Malaysia)

Japan’s exports fall, imports from China slump

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TOKYO: Japan’s exports slipped for a 15th straight month in February as US and China-bound shipments declined, suggesting a cooling of business activity in the world’s third-largest economy due to the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Imports from China fell at their fastest pace since 1986 after the virus, which has killed more than 7,000 people worldwide, led to a widespread shutdown of production in the region’s largest economy.

Ministry of Finance (MoF) data out yesterday showed Japan’s exports fell 1.0% from a year earlier in February, dragged by

US-bound shipments of cars and metal processing machinery to China.

It was the 15th straight month of contractio­n, marking the longest such run since a 23-month stretch to July 1987 when the height of the country’s stock market and real estate bubble was not yet reached, Refinitiv data showed.

The fall was also smaller than a 4.3% decline expected by economists, and followed a 2.6% decrease in January.

The data offers the strongest evidence yet of the growing economic impact coronaviru­s crisis. Many companies complained about the closing of factories in China and declining trade with Asia’s largest economy in a Reuters survey published yesterday.

By region, Japan’s exports to China fell 0.4% year-on-year in February, dragged down by falling shipments of integrated circuit chip manufactur­ing parts and ground products for chemicals.

US-bound exports, a key destinatio­n for Japanese cars and electronic­s, dropped 2.6% in February, posting a seventh straight month of declines due to falling exports of 3,000-cc cars and semiconduc­tor production equipment.

Reflecting weak

domestic demand, Japan’s total imports shed 14.0%, in line with the median estimate for a 14.4% decrease, dragged down by the sharp drop in imports from China.

Imports from China slumped 47.1% from the previous year, seeing their biggest drop since August 1986, ministry officials said, as the country went into lockdown due to the spreading coronaviru­s epidemic.

As a result, Japan’s trade balance recorded a surplus of ¥1.110 trillion (RM50.88 billion), its largest since September 2007, versus the median estimate for a ¥917.2 billion surplus. – Reuters

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