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Paul Cavey

Paul Cavey

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

Today's focus is Korea, with consumer confidence and GDP, and yesterday's loan officer survey. Elsewhere, the BOJ has published its own cuts of trade and CPI data. That includes "underlying inflation", though these days the bank itself seems to believe reality is more complicated.

2 min read

Korea – inconclusive data

Korea – inconclusive data

With yesterday's loan officer survey, and today's release of consumer confidence and GDP, there is lots to dig into. There are some important takeaways, but overall, the releases don't provide clarity on the two big issues facing the economy: house prices, and the outlook for growth.

3 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

The headlines are dominated by Trump's Asia trip. But there's also been lots of data released: industrial profits in China, services PPI in Japan, and consumer confidence in Taiwan. Export price data for China have also appeared, and echo the stability seen in the data for the rest of the region.

3 min read

Japan – services PPI ticks up in September

Japan – services PPI ticks up in September

The steady drop in services PPI inflation stabilised in September, with core ticking up to 2.9% YoY. The data aren't good enough to prove the decline is now over, but I do think a floor should be close. Lumpiness in the data suggests a short-term bounce, and the labour market remains tight.

2 min read

China – no cuts in export prices

China – no cuts in export prices

China has now released trade price and volume data for September. They show export volumes holding up despite tariffs, and that isn't because of price cuts. The recent mild upturn in import demand has also sustained. That calls into question the sharp fall in last week's FAI data.

2 min read

Last week, next week

Last week, next week

Trump's visit will dominate the news this week, particularly his trade talks with China and Korea, and whether he says anything about the JPY in Japan. It now doesn't look like the BOJ will hike on Thursday, but the tone should be more positive. The data highlight will be Korean business confidence.

7 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

Japan CPI data showed headline near 3% and rising (inflation!), but core near 1% and falling (deflation!). Price data in China, by contrast, are stable, which is at odds with weak FAI. Finally, my updated trade mapper dashboard, which now covers autos and the battery and rare earth supply chains.

2 min read

Japan – another noisy month for CPI

Japan – another noisy month for CPI

National inflation data for September was messy again. One reason was public service prices falling, a development that stands out when a theme of recent BOJ speeches has been pent-up inflation pressure in the public sector. Overall, the inflation picture still looks solid.

2 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

China's detailed monetary data for September are important, showing three positive trends. Elsewhere, the BOK didn't change policy, with just hints of becoming more positive. In Taiwan, IP and retail sales data for September continue to show the desynchronisation of the export and domestic cycles.

2 min read

China – three shifts in underlying monetary data

China – three shifts in underlying monetary data

Detailed monetary data for China continue to look more positive. Three trends stand out: a further slowing of the flow of household money into time deposits; a resumption of capital inflows; and continuation of the faster pace of PBC lending to the financial sector.

2 min read

Korea – BOK slightly less negative

Korea – BOK slightly less negative

There were slight hints of a shift from the BOK today, but the governor also stressed the need for more certainty in areas like the Korea-US trade talks, and overall, the bank's basic stance was unchanged. For a clearer shift, I think business sentiment and monthly economic output need to rise.

2 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

Lots of data to analyse today: exports in Japan, PPI in Korea, and export orders (released yesterday for Taiwan). Also, a longer piece taking stock of the Korean cycle and thinking about the BOK before tomorrow's monetary policy meeting.

3 min read

Korea – 2016/17 again?

Korea – 2016/17 again?

The BOK tomorrow will likely remain on hold tomorrow, primarily because of the recent sharp rise in house prices. I think the more important question is whether the bank changes its view about rate cuts into 2026. I don't think it will, but here I outline a scenario that would get that outcome.

7 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

Detailed Q3 GDP data for China don't provide much extra clarity. By contrast, yesterday's speech by Takata of the BOJ was a clear argument of why he thinks the bank needs to hike. In Korea, data for the first 20D of October show strong growth in exports of semiconductors, but not in anything else.

2 min read

Japan – Takata's case for hiking

Japan – Takata's case for hiking

BOJ board member Takata Hajime yesterday likened the downwards revisions to the BOJ's forecasts on the back of tariffs to a typhoon-linked "planned suspension" of public transport that now needs to be lifted. He also argued inflationary pressure is increasingly being driven by domestic factors.

5 min read

China – more puzzles in Q3 data

China – more puzzles in Q3 data

Detailed Q3 data include a few puzzles: net export contribution stable when the trade surplus declined; construction dropping sharply when property has looked less bad; and quarterly investment growing when monthly FAI has dropped. The one detail that really adds up: manufacturing remaining strong.

2 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

Little sign of change in today's China macro data. So, while areas like consumption aren't as weak as the headlines suggest, in activity data overall there's little sign of stabilisation, let alone recovery. I discussed some of the issues around China, as well as the region, in a podcast last week.

2 min read

Region – podcast

Region – podcast

I really enjoyed doing this podcast with Bilal Hafeez from Micro Hive. It was a great chance to get into a lot of the structural themes across the region that I have been working on.

1 min read

China – no change in underlying trends

China – no change in underlying trends

Property is weak, manufacturing FAI has slowed, consumer spending on goods is soft, and price deflation isn't lifting. However, services consumption is better, and output of both goods and services is growing by more than 5%. The government likely still thinks the economy is muddling through.

3 min read

Last week, next week

Last week, next week

My China theme – signs of stabilisation in the underlying cycle – seems anti-consensus, and, frankly, likely won't be supported by today's data. Elsewhere, the key issues this week will be what hints Takaichi's new government gives about the BOJ, and what confidence the BOK has for the 2026 outlook.

6 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

Korea's labour market looks better, though sustainable recovery likely needs stronger business confidence. Other data suggest an end to the sharp price falls for Korean auto exports to the US. Cars are unusual: in neither Korea nor the other economies have overall export prices been as volatile.

2 min read

Korea – employment perks up

Korea – employment perks up

Employment bounced in September, providing more evidence of cycle bottoming. That shouldn't matter much for BOK thinking: in July it raised employment forecasts, and has expected recovery into 2026. I am sceptical that recovery runs far, but there are upside risks if business sentiment improves.

3 min read

East Asia Today

East Asia Today

Three things important for markets: yesterday's monetary data from China, today's speech by BOJ Board member Naoki Tamura, and TSMC's Q3 earnings report. In addition, Japan released service-sector data and machine orders for August.

3 min read

China – incrementally encouraging

China – incrementally encouraging

Yesterday's monetary and credit data for September weren't bullish, but I do think they were incrementally encouraging: excluding CGBs, credit issuance and the credit impulse ticked up; the firming of M1 growth has continued; and there is more evidence of a floor in the M1:M2 ratio.

2 min read

Japan – Tamura's upside risks

Japan – Tamura's upside risks

Naoki Tamura's speeches are always clear and interesting. Some of his remarks today overlap with points I've highlighted the last few months: the strength of the Tankan survey and sakura report; repressed inflation in public services prices; the negative impact of inflation on pensioners.

4 min read