The Star Malaysia

Japanese exports get boost from Beijing

Weak yen tailwind aids growth as domestic data sags

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TOKYO: Japan’s exports grew for a fourth consecutiv­e month as the weak yen provided a tailwind and demand in China picked up, giving the economy a needed boost as domestic consumptio­n sags.

Exports gained 7.3% in March from a year earlier, with growth slightly decelerati­ng from February’s 7.8% gain, the finance ministry reported. Economists had forecast a 7% increase. Imports fell 4.9%, compared with the consensus estimate of a 5.1% decline.

Yesterday’s data showed that the economy continues to benefit from the effects of a sliding yen that is giving a flattering gloss to the underlying export trend.

The yen averaged 149.45 to the dollar in the latest month, 10.7% weaker than 134.97 in the previous year, the ministry said.

That helped inflate the value of some shipments in yen terms. By volume, exports declined by 2.1%.

“I feel that the March exports growth was largely due to the currency factor, and exports are not that strong,” said Yayoi Sakanaka, senior economist at Mizuho Research & Technologi­es. “Semiconduc­tors are picking up, but not yet in terms of volume.”

The currency impact may continue to sustain growth in exports in coming months, as the yen has extended losses. Japan’s currency continues to trade around fresh 34-year lows, prompting objections from authoritie­s.

Among industries leading the gains in March were the automakers and semiconduc­tor and electronic parts sectors, which saw increases of 7.1% and 11.3%, respective­ly.

By region, China saw a 12.6% increase, accelerati­ng from 2.5% in the previous month, as businesses ramped up operations following the lunar new year holidays, helping to power 5.3% economic growth in the January-march quarter. But shipments to the United States and Europe rose at a slower pace of 8.5% and 3%, pointing to some patchiness in the overall export trend.

Taro Kimura, Bloomberg economist, said: “A slightly weaker gain in Japan’s outbound shipments in March doesn’t derail a solid trend that is likely to bolster gross domestic product in the first quarter via stronger net exports and, indirectly, capital investment.”

Japan’s growth in shipments comes against the backdrop of a somewhat shaky environmen­t for global commerce overall.

Worldwide trade is advancing little by little, with the Goods Trade Barometer managed by the World Trade Organisati­on reaching 100.6 last month. That’s slightly above the trend baseline, indicating weak upward momentum, but various risks to the outlook persist.

“Merchandis­e trade should continue to recover gradually in the early months of 2024, but any gains could be easily derailed by regional conflicts and geopolitic­al tensions,” the global organisati­on said last month.

The world’s fourth-largest economy is projected to record a small expansion again in the January-march quarter, according to a Bloomberg survey.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Trade cheer: Workers in action at a port in Japan. a weaker gain in the country’s outbound shipments in March doesn’t derail a solid trend that is likely to bolster gross domestic product in the first quarter via stronger net exports and capital investment.
— Bloomberg Trade cheer: Workers in action at a port in Japan. a weaker gain in the country’s outbound shipments in March doesn’t derail a solid trend that is likely to bolster gross domestic product in the first quarter via stronger net exports and capital investment.

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