Paul Cavey
Korea – consumer confidence and PPI
The continued strength of consumer confidence in today's February survey might be hinting at a broader cyclical upturn. At the same time, house price expectations eased. CPI expectations were stable at 2.6%, and likewise, today's PPI for January doesn't point to a big near-term change in inflation.
Taiwan – into unchartered waters
Taiwan's macro story is fascinating. Rarely has growth in such a rich economy accelerated so much, with reindustrialisation and huge external surpluses, at the same time as rates and the currency barely move. I'd think that something has to give. Will 2026 finally be the year that it does?
East Asia Today
Because of the new year holiday, the trade data across the region for the first couple of months are a bit suspect. That's particularly true when the data don't even cover the full month. Still, in the first 20 days of February, Korean chip exports, and shipments to China, look strong.
Last week, next week
I spent time last week delving into export prices and terms of trade, dynamics that should be offering support for currencies. The data flow was all about Japan, and painted the picture of an economy in good shape. That could yet be undermined by policy choices, either at home, or in the US.
East Asia Today
Japan's economy is looking different in 2026, with manufacturing sentiment improving, goods inflation easing, but service price and wage inflation holding up. Korea, meanwhile, faces some of the same issues as in 2025: while household debt is easing, property price inflation isn't.
Korea – household debt down, property prices up
The BOK's quarterly data show household credit eased under 75% of GDP at in 2025 for the first time since 2017. However, the BOK is concerned that the ongoing rise in house prices will undermine this progress. The bank's own loan officer survey suggests a bounceback in lending is indeed a real risk
Japan – strong PMIs, weaker inflation
Manufacturing sentiment is up, and falling headline inflation should further boost the mood of households too. For the BOJ, the critical issue will be whether these improvements in soft data feed into real aggregate demand, in turn supporting its confidence about the trend in underlying inflation.
East Asia Today
Highlights of a longer note looking at the impact of China "shocks" through the prism of the terms of trade. The conclusion is that for Asia, the second China shock is shaping up to be less damaging than the first. Also, summary charts of today's machine orders in Japan, which were strong.
Region – Asia and the China Shock 2.0
As capital goods exporters, the rest of East Asia is vulnerable to the second China Shock. But the first was deflationary not just because export prices fell, but because import prices also rose, squeezing local incomes. By contrast, the terms of trade this time are stable, and starting to improve.
East Asia Today
With most of the region still on holiday, today's daily focuses on today's export release from Japan. The big rise in January, led by shipments to China, will largely be the result of holiday front-loading. But the general direction is for exports and manufacturing to be a bit stronger in 2026.
East Asia Today
December services activity in Japan dipped. But that is likely temporary: service sector sentiment remains strong, and falling China tourism has been offset by more visitors from Korea. Details of Taiwan's Q4 GDP release shows the terms of trade boosting real national income per capita by 15% in Q4.
East Asia Today
Today's headline Q4 GDP data for Japan were weak, but the details were better, and the 2026 outlook remains better. The weekend's high-frequency price data for China – the last release before the holiday – indicates the lessening of PPI deflation continued through the first 10 days of February.
Last week, next week
Three themes from last week: improving terms of trade, led by rising export prices; expanding current account surpluses; and growing optimism about the sustainability of AI-related hardware demand that is critical for cycles in Taiwan and Korea. Also, happy year of the (fire) horse.
East Asia Today
Lots of data releases across the region today. Two themes stand out: 1) Rising CA external surpluses and inflows, with the latest indicators coming from China and 2) improving terms of trade, seen in Korea's export/import price data for December, and Taiwan's Q4 GDP release.
China – big inflows, sluggish domestic
January fx settlement data suggest large fx intervention for a second consecutive month. One reason is the CA surplus, which other data today show widened in Q4. Another is interest rates which are more stable, even though monetary trends aren't changing much, and property prices continue to fall.
East Asia Today
Today's main release was PPI in Japan, with the most interesting takeaway being higher export prices. In Korea, weekly prices show food and energy inflation softening so far in February. Data in China show interest rates for mortgages stabilising, but continuing to decline for firms.
Japan – import prices up, but export prices up more
Import prices aren't rising quickly, but they do remain elevated, supporting PPI in a way that wasn't true during Japan's long deflation. More interesting now is the strength of export prices, a dynamic that boosts exporter profits, and via the terms of trade, provides a tailwind for domestic income
East Asia Today
China's CPI inflation dipped in January, but that was holiday-related. PPI,by contrast, rose MoM for the second consecutive month. Labour market data in Korea isn't getting worse, but is sluggish. By contrast, Taiwan wage growth in 2025 reached the highest since 2000. Also today, my latest video.
China – PPI up again
CPI inflation softened in January, but it always does when the new year holiday falls in February. PPI has less seasonal distortion, and rose MoM in January for the second consecutive time. The GDP deflator is likely to improve again in Q1. This is about external factors, but deflation is lessening.
East Asia Today
A longer note on Korean household savings and consumption. To put that in context, this daily includes charts giving the regional picture over the last 30 years. The only cyclical indicator released today was TSMC's sales for January, which were strong, but might not mean much given LNY distortions.
Korea – consequences of higher savings
The BOK recently published some nice research highlighting the rise in the household savings ratio. That is an important phenomenon, helping explain the weakness of consumption, the rise in the current account surplus, and being intertwined with the surge in Korea's overseas equity buying.
East Asia Today
Lots of data in Japan today, which again show the cycle warming up, and that Takaichi's economic inheritance is very different from that of Abe almost 15 years ago. Taiwan's trade data are distorted by LNY, so stronger sales to China, and of non-semi products, are interesting, not conclusive.