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Macro and market analysis of the world's largest economic region
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As with Korea, there are some tentative signs of a tun in Taiwan's industrial cycle, with export orders ticking up in December, and equities rising. But inventories in IT remain high, and the PMI in January was very soft. There's little sign of a real lift yet.
There wasn't much change in either exports or CPI in January. At -14.6% YoY, the change in exports was the weakest in the current cycle. Headline CPI ticked up, but that was because of an expected change in utility prices. Core and personal services inflation fell, though only slightly.
The two big hopes for Japan's economy in 1H23 are a decline in inflation that lifts domestic spending, and a normalisation of Asian travel that boosts tourism. December unemployment and January consumer confidence suggest both dynamics might be in play, but not yet powerfully.
The PMIs improved in January, and our FCI indicates a further rise to 52 from here. That said, the details today weren't particularly strong. They can be regarded as backward-looking, but we continue to think that policy hasn't moved enough to ensure recovery continues beyond the next few months.
A couple of weeks ago, we outlined a policy reaction function for the Korean central bank. Today we do the same for the Taiwan. The model strongly suggests that the tightening cycle is over, but isn't yet indicating that loosening is about to begin.
Tokyo CPI rose again in January, and on a headline basis is now above 4%. Leading indicators continue to suggest the peak should be close, with this week's services PPI for December falling.
Business sentiment continues to fall, taking the BOK into what would usually be loosening territory. However, there is now some risk of second derivative improvement, with exporter sentiment and the diffusion both ticking up through February.
Inflation expectations ticked up in January. That probably reflects a stabilisation of headline CPI on the back of higher utility prices. It would be more significant if improving market sentiment towards the global cycle starts to show up in a real strengthening of Korean industrial data.
Exports across the region fell by -7% on average in December. By the end of Q1, the rate of contraction is likely to double, led by bigger falls in shipments to the US and EU. Beyond that, there are tentative signs of a floor, as DM sentiment surveys bounce, and China emerges after covid.
With US rates peaking and Asia finally opening up after covid, Japan's economy looks better placed for recovery. If the BOJ tightens now, it risks a policy mistake. Otherwise, the indicators to be watching are the shunto, and recovery of the hospitality industry as Asian travel finally normalises.
You can find a lot more charts in the pages for the individual economies