TOKYO -Japan’s imports jumped to a record amount in July, boosted by global fuel inflation and a weak yen, outweighing exports and deepening the trade deficit, in a sign of a further worsening in the terms of trade for the export-oriented economy.
The trade data came on the heels of Reuters Tankan, which showed improvement in Japan’s business sentiment in August, while a key gauge of corporate capital spending rebounded in June from the previous month’s decline.
While the mixed batch of data provides some evidence of resilience, policymakers are likely to maintain calls for more stimulus as the world’s third-largest economy struggles to shake off the hit from the pandemic and as the global outlook dims.
“Exports are likely to slow down ahead due to global tightening of monetary policy, which could sap corporate appetite for investment,” said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchukin Research Institute.
“Japan’s export-led economy will be losing momentum towards later this year and early next amid fears of global downturn.”
Ministry of Finance data showed on Wednesday exports grew 19 percent in July from a year earlier, posting 17 straight months of gains led by U.S.-bound shipments of cars and China-bound chip-related shipments, beating expectations for a 18.2-percent gain.
Imports rose 47.2 percent in July year-on-year to a record 10.2 trillion yen ($76.06 billion), driven by costs of crude oil, coal and liquid natural gas. That beat expectations for a 45.7 percent rise and overwhelmed exports, bringing the trade deficit to 1.4368 trillion yen in July.
The yen’s 23.1 percent fall from a year earlier added to higher import costs, the data showed.
Capex returns but risks ahead
Separate data showed Japan’s new machinery orders, a key gauge of capital spending, rose 0.9 percent in June from the previous month, reversing the previous month’s decline but below the 1.3 percent gain expected by economists.
In April-June, core machinery orders grew 8.1 percent from the previous quarter, posting the fastest growth since the final quarter of 2020. Firms are expecting a 1.8 percent decline in July-September core orders, pulling back from the solid growth seen in the second quarter, a government official told reporters.
However, there are downside risks such as China’s economic slowdown and a COVID-19 resurgence, the official added.
Reflecting corporate resilience, the Reuters Tankan sentiment index for manufacturers rose 4 points to 13 in August and is seen up further to 15 over next three months.
The service-sector index rose to 19 from 14 in July and was seen steady in November helped in part by the lifting of coronavirus curbs among industries such as tourism and eateries.
($1 = 134.1000 yen)