The Pak Banker

BoJ mood worsens due to strong yen, global economy

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Japanese manufactur­ers' confidence probably deteriorat­ed to the lowest in nearly three years and it is expected to worsen in the coming quarter due to exporters concern over a strong yen and worries over the global economy, a poll showed.

Big firms are likely slash their capital spending plan for the new fiscal year beginning in April, according to the survey.

Firms tend to be cautious in their spending plans at this time of year, but concern over the outlook for profits makes it unlikely that they will become more ambitious in their capital expenditur­e budgets later in the year, analysts said.

Date due for release next week includes industrial production, which likely declined for the first time in two months in February due to weak demand in Japan and overseas. The Bank of Japan's quarterly tankan business sentiment survey was expected to show the headline index for big manufactur­ers' sentiment slipped by 4 points to plus 8 points from plus 12 points three months ago, the poll of 23 economists showed.

It would be the lowest reading since the June 2013 survey when big manufactur­ers' mood stood at plus 4 points.

"Worsening sentiment among big man- ufacturers likely became apparent due to the economic slowdown overseas and the yen's sharp appreciati­on," Tsuyoshi Ueno, senior economist at NLI Research Institute said in the survey. "Domestic consumer spending in the doldrums is depressing the mood among non-manufactur­ers, but strong demand from foreign visitors and the benefits of the BOJ's negative interest rate on the real estate industry will probably moderate that pressure to some degree." The sentiment index for big non-manufactur­ers was expected to slip to plus 24 from plus 25 three months ago, worsening for the first time since the September 2014 survey. The poll also showed the sentiment of both manufactur­ers' and nonmanufac­turers will worsen in the coming three months due to uncertaint­y over the market outlook and the state of emerging economies, as well as sluggish wage recovery.

Big firms were forecast to slash their capital spending plan by 0.7 percent for the coming fiscal year, according to the poll. Earlier this week, the Tankan monthly survey, which shows a close correlatio­n with the BOJ's quarterly tankan survey, showed Japanese manufactur­ers' confidence waned in March and was unlikely to change much over the next three months.

The poll also found industrial production, which will be released on Wednesday, likely fell 6.0 percent in February from the previous month after it increased 3.7 percent in January. Retail sales were seen rising 1.7 percent in February from a year earlier after a revised 0.2 percent slip in January. Household spending was likely down 1.5 percent in February, falling for a sixth straight month.

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