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Japan Core Machinery Orders Sink to Near Two-Year Low

The data added to concerns that Japanese firms are holding off on investments amid a profit squeeze from rising energy and raw materials costs


Kubota's Agri Robo
Kubota's Agri Robo, an automated harvester equipped with GPS, reaps rice plants in Kanzaki in Japan's Saga prefecture. Photo: AFP

 

Japan’s core machinery orders posted their biggest monthly fall in nearly two years in February, data showed on Wednesday, dragged down by a steep drop in demand from information technology (IT) to extend their decline into a second month.

The data added to concerns that Japanese firms are holding off on investments amid a profit squeeze from rising energy and raw materials costs, fuelling worries about the pace of economic growth as the economy tries to recover to pre-pandemic levels.

Core machinery orders, a highly volatile leading indicator of capital spending in the coming six to nine months, fell 9.8% in February from the previous month, the Cabinet Office data showed on Wednesday.

The fall was the biggest since April 2020 and far larger than a drop of 1.5% forecast by economists in a Reuters poll and a 2.0% decrease in January.

Core orders from non-manufacturers excluding ships and electrical utilities fell 14.4% in February, led by a 36.9% fall in orders from information service firms, the biggest drop since January 2006.

“The information service sector has been aggressive in buying computers for IT systems and data centre facilities since last October, and the movement appears to have stalled,” a government official told a media briefing.

Orders from manufacturers fell 1.8%, hurt by soft demand from chemicals and other material industries. Orders from electric machinery firms grew 13.8% as they ramped up investments in semiconductor-making equipment.

The government on Wednesday downgraded its assessment of machinery orders, saying the recovery was stalling.

On a year-on-year basis, core orders rose 4.3% in February, the data showed, much weaker than a 14.5% rise expected by economists.

Rattled by supply disruptions and soaring production costs, Japanese business confidence worsened in the first quarter for the first time in nearly two years, a Bank of Japan survey showed this month.

Managers of major Japanese firms expected the near-term recovery outlook to stay modest at best, on uncertainties such as the Ukraine crisis and its impact on commodity inflation, a Reuters poll showed on Wednesday.

Economists have cut projections for Japan’s growth, in view of the heightening inflationary pressures on households and businesses.

 

  • Reuters, with additional editing by George Russell

 


 

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George Russell

George Russell is a freelance writer and editor based in Hong Kong who has lived in Asia since 1996. His work has been published in the Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, New York Post, Variety, Forbes and the South China Morning Post.

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