East Asia Econ
The platform for tracking and understanding East Asia macro
Latest analysis
Korea – CA surplus of 20% of GDP still doesn't matter
The flow story behind KRW weakness has transitioned from overseas buying by domestic retail to domestic selling by foreigners. Two other factors help inform the exchange rate: correlation with the JPY and, perhaps, a BOK that is late in hiking given the huge acceleration in NGDP growth.
Taiwan – real rates universally negative
June's core inflation of 2.3% isn't high in an absolute sense. But outside LNY, it is the highest since the 1990s, and, remarkably, above both the policy rate and 10-year yields. Energy inflation will ease, but with wage growth of 2.7% and rising, and equity prices strong, rates really look too low.
Japan – wages don't fully explain stronger spending
Today's May consumption activity data were stronger again. That rise can be explained by three factors: a temporary boost as purchases of household appliances are brought forward, decent – though in May, not necessarily stronger – wage growth, and perhaps, a wealth effect as asset prices rise.
Weekly: cyclical picture clearest in Japan
China's cycle looks more mixed rather than bad. In Japan, there are clear signs of an acceleration in both activity and inflation. For Korea and Taiwan, the theme is a broadening of activity as the semiconductor export boom feeds into domestic economies.
Japan – AI boosting manufacturing
The detailed release of the Tankan confirms the message of yesterday's summary: price pressures are rising again, and momentum in the corporate sector is strong. There is some sluggishness in autos, but as in export data, that is being offset by AI demand for electronics.
Korea – transition time for CPI
The sharp rise in inflation since March slowed in June, and the BOK expects a drop in July. But cost-push from the surge in semi prices is feeding into CPI, and the BOK also expects "expanding demand pressures" from the economic recovery to drive inflation from here.
Korea – broader cycle, but mixed
There are signs of a broadening of the cycle, with construction past the worst, capex rising, and the labour market bottoming. However, while services activity has been strong recently, retail sales are still sluggish, and industrial production is going sideways.