East Asia Econ
The platform for tracking and understanding East Asia macro
Latest analysis
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.
Korea – not quite K-shaped
Business sentiment is middling, and the gap between large and small firms looks K-shaped. However, consumer confidence is quite strong, and the BOK has argued that sector disparities aren't an issue for monetary policy. Falling oil prices do lessen inflation risk, but also boost GDP growth.
Region – commodity boom or BS?
A longer note putting the chip supercycle in the context of commodity price surges, dismissing concerns about the narrowness of growth, and exploring the different macro dynamics in Korea versus Taiwan. One is a commodity boom, the other is indeed BS, but both suggest real exchange rate appreciation
Last week, next week
China's cycle is weak, but I'm not yet convinced it is getting worse. Japan's cycle will now be improving, but the BOJ needs to show that it can keep up. The BOK's hawkish turn can go further still if the KRW remains so weak. I think inflation risks in Taiwan are broader than judged by the CBC.
China – is (it still possible) the worst is over?
My latest video, making the case for a bottoming of China's economy. In light of this week's poor official data, the argument might look off-base, which means it should at least be interesting. I do think the logic holds up, but as discussed here, there are reasons I could be wrong.