Sunday, March 31, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: UPDATE 2-Japan business mood improves as market reacts to 'Abenomics'

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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UPDATE 2-Japan business mood improves as market reacts to 'Abenomics'
Apr 1st 2013, 00:49

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Sun Mar 31, 2013 8:49pm EDT

  * Big manufacturers' sentiment DI -8 vs forecast -7      * Service-sector sentiment DI +6 vs forecast +8      * Manufacturers expect improvements 3 months ahead      * BOJ likely to ease at Kuroda's first rate review          By Leika Kihara and Kaori Kaneko      TOKYO, April 1 (Reuters) - Japanese business sentiment  improved in the first three months of 2013, a central bank  survey showed, after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's aggressive  monetary and fiscal policy prescriptions helped to weaken the  yen and bolster share prices.      The survey comes ahead of the Bank of Japan's first  policy-setting meeting under new Governor Haruhiko Kuroda this  week, when the board is set to expand monetary stimulus and  debate an overhaul of its policy framework.       Big manufacturers' mood improved after two straight quarters  of deterioration, with the headline sentiment index rising 4  points to minus 8, the BOJ's closely watched tankan quarterly  survey showed on Monday. That was roughly in line with a median  market forecast of minus 7.      The manufacturers expect business conditions to improve in  the three months ahead with an index gauging the outlook at  minus 1, signalling that prospects for the world's third-largest  economy were turning up.      "The result reflected companies' expectations that a weaker  yen and policy steps pursued by the government will have a  positive impact on the economy," said Tatsushi Shikano, senior  economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities in Tokyo.      "The tankan outcome aside, the BOJ will ease policy at its  April 3-4 policy review as the governor is expected to make good  on his promise of pursuing bold monetary easing," he said.                  CAPITAL SPENDING STILL WEAK      The tankan report, a key touchstone for BOJ policymakers,  underscores the view that Japan's economy is gradually bouncing  back from last year's recession and headed for a moderate  recovery driven in part by a pickup in global demand.      Abe's ambitious push for big stimulus spending and monetary  easing by the central bank - dubbed "Abenomics" - has also  offered some relief to the export-reliant economy by helping to  weaken the yen and lift Tokyo share prices.      Big manufacturers expect the dollar to average 85.22 yen   in the current fiscal year from April, up sharply from  their estimate of 80.56 yen for the previous year ended in  March. That is still much lower than recent levels around 94 yen  to the dollar, suggesting that exporters may see further  increases in revenue if current yen levels hold.      In a sign of a broadening recovery, the sentiment index for  big non-manufacturers improved 2 points to plus 6, the tankan  showed. The index for the three months to June was at plus 9.      But big firms plan to cut capital expenditure by 2.0 percent  in the current business year, suggesting that the positive mood  needs to be sustained longer before companies are convinced to  boost spending.      The survey results are broadly in line with the Reuters  Tankan survey issued last month, which showed sentiment among  manufacturers improved for a fourth straight month in March.      The tankan's sentiment indexes are derived by subtracting  the percentage of respondents who say conditions are poor from  those who say they are good. A negative reading means pessimists  outnumbered optimists.      Abe's expansionary policies and expectations for a moderate  pickup in global growth have put Japan's economy on the path to  a gradual recovery from a shallow recession.      Analysts expect the world's third-largest economy to have  grown 1.0 percent in the year that just ended in March, and to  expand 2.2 percent in the current fiscal year.  
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