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East Asia Econ

The platform for tracking and understanding East Asia macro

Latest analysis

Taiwan – Trump shifts position

Taiwan – Trump shifts position

My initial interpretation of the Xi-Trump meeting looks wrong. While in the official talks neither side gave much, in a subsequent interview with Fox news, President Trump softened US support for Taiwan. Over the medium-term, that could be significant for politics in Taiwan, and currency valuations.

3 min read

China – cycle weaker in April

China – cycle weaker in April

Most of the headline activity data in April weakened, with goods retail sales being particularly bad. So, clearly no macro recovery. But services retail sales picked up, and the stability in home sales and household liquidity preference, and firmer pricing, continue to suggest broad stabilisation.

3 min read

Last week, next week

Last week, next week

The main regional themes weren't challenged by events last week: macro stabilisation in China; upside risks to inflation, particularly in Japan; and upside risks to growth, a theme for both Taiwan and Korea as long as the energy crisis in the Middle East doesn't derail the semiconductor super cycle.

7 min read

Region – import prices up, export prices up more

Region – import prices up, export prices up more

Data today for Japan and Korea show the inflationary impact of the War, with import prices in both economies rising at double-digit rates. However, such rises have been seen before. By contrast, export price inflation is setting records, offsetting the hit from energy prices to domestic growth.

3 min read

China – why are imports so strong?

China – why are imports so strong?

The big trade story this year is the sudden rise in imports. There are some signs of firmer domestic demand. But 80% of the increase is from two categories alone: precious metals and semiconductors. And most of the semi strength is volumes, which is puzzling when global IC prices are rising so much.

5 min read

Region – the other terms of trade shock

Region – the other terms of trade shock

The Iran War will push up inflation. But for growth, transmission is via the terms of trade, and higher import prices are being offset by historical rises in export prices, increases that are unlikely to be just cyclical. That supports growth in Asia, at the expense of even more inflation for ROW.

8 min read

China – inflation up again

China – inflation up again

PPI inflation accelerated again in April, and with CPI inflation firm, the GDP deflator is on track to rise in Q2 for the first time in 2022. The turn is being led by energy and commodity prices. There are some signs of a stabilisation in underlying prices too, but so far, they are tentative.

3 min read

Last week, next week

Last week, next week

Stabilisation in China seems to be becoming a more popular view. Hope is building for a BOJ hike in June, but one won't be enough. KRW should be strengthening, but likey needs more Middle East certainty. The big event for the region this week is the Xi-Trump meeting.

7 min read

China – imports strong again

China – imports strong again

After doing nothing for 3 years, imports are suddenly growing 20%. Chips are one component, but while I thought that related to prices, official data show the bigger diver of overall imports is volumes. I am not sure that's because of domestic demand, but it is starting to reduce the trade surplus.

2 min read

Taiwan – limited impact yet

Taiwan – limited impact yet

April trade data show little damage from the Iran war. If the crisis remains limited to energy prices, Taiwan should be somewhat insulated. Energy imports are small relative to chip exports, and while import prices will rise, export prices are now also increasing for the first time in a generation.

3 min read

Korea – from foreign buying to foreigner selling

Korea – from foreign buying to foreigner selling

March data offer more evidence that the KRW just can't get a break. Finally, retail outflows into foreign assets eased, only to be replaced by huge domestic selling by overseas investors. That has normalised in April, so perhaps investors are realising that a CA surplus of 20%+ of GDP should matter

2 min read

Summary charts