Monday, September 30, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: UPDATE 2-Japan business mood hits near 6-yr high, Abe set to raise tax

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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UPDATE 2-Japan business mood hits near 6-yr high, Abe set to raise tax
Oct 1st 2013, 03:27

Mon Sep 30, 2013 11:27pm EDT

  * Big manufacturers' sentiment DI +12 vs June +4      * Service-sector sentiment also improves slightly      * Big firms plan 5.1 pct increase in FY2013/14 capex      * Sentiment seen unchanged 3 months ahead, outlook murky      * Wages continue to fall, household spending slips          By Leika Kihara      TOKYO, Oct 1 (Reuters) - Japanese manufacturers' sentiment  improved sharply in the three months to September to a near  six-year high, a closely-watched central bank survey showed,  cementing the case for Premier Shinzo Abe to proceed with a  planned sales tax hike next year.      Service-sector sentiment also brightened slightly and big  companies plan to increase capital spending, a sign robust  personal consumption and a pickup in exports are solidifying a  recovery in the world's third-largest economy.      The latest result made it a near certainty Abe will give the  go-ahead of the tax hike on Tuesday, and compile a stimulus  package to cushion the blow to the economy, analysts said.      "This is very constructive in terms of the assessment of the  current economic situation. There is no reason that Abe should  stop raising the sales tax," said Masamichi Adachi, senior  economist at JPMorgan Securities in Tokyo.      But there were signs the improvement in mood may have peaked  partly due to uncertainty on overseas economies, underscoring  the challenge policymakers face in sustaining the positive  momentum long enough to persuade firms to raise wages.      The headline index for big manufacturers' sentiment rose 8  points to plus 12 in September, much better than a median market  forecast for plus 7, the Bank of Japan's "tankan" quarterly  survey showed on Tuesday.      It was the third straight quarter of improvement and the  highest reading since the survey of December 2007, suggesting  that the feel-good mood generated by Abe's reflationary policies  is broadening.      The sentiment index for big non-manufacturers also rose 2  points to plus 14 in September with hopes for bigger public  works spending lifting morale among construction firms.      Abe has cited the tankan outcome as key factor in deciding  whether to raise the sales tax from next April to 8 percent from  5 percent, which is part of a two-stage increase in the tax rate  aimed at fixing Japan's tattered finances.                    WAGES KEEP FALLING      Japan's economy expanded for three straight quarters in  April-June, outpacing many G7 nations, as Abe's reflationary  policies bolstered household spending and drove down the yen,  benefiting exports.      The BOJ also offered an intense burst of stimulus in April,  pledging to double the base money via aggressive asset purchases  to achieve its 2 percent inflation target in two years.      Sentiment improved sharply for sectors that benefit from a  weak yen, such as automakers and electronic goods makers. Big  manufacturers revised down their yen forecasts for the current  business year to 94.45 to the dollar, from 91.20 yen in the  previous tankan survey.      But there were some signs of potential weakness in the  outlook: Both big manufacturers and non-manufacturers expect  business conditions to stay largely unchanged three months  ahead, a sign the improvement in mood may have peaked.      Big firms plan to increase capital spending by 5.1 percent  in the current fiscal year to next March, lower than 6.0 percent  projected in a Reuters poll. That was largely unchanged from  their plan three months ago, despite government plans to boost  tax incentives to encourage companies into spending more.      "There's a gap between improving sentiment and the state of  the real economy, which slowed somewhat in July-August as shown  by recent indicators such as exports, factory output and  consumption," said Naoki Iizuka, economist at Citigroup Global  Markets Japan.      The BOJ raised its assessment of the economy in September to  say it was recovering moderately but some officials worry about  slowing growth in emerging economies, many of which are big  markets for Japanese cars and electronic goods.      Another concern for policymakers is whether companies will  finally start to raise wages, instead of sitting on a huge pile  of cash, so that consumers have more money to spend.      So far, the signs are not good. Wage earners' total cash  earnings fell 0.6 percent in the year to August with regular pay  down for 15 months in a row, government data showed on Tuesday.      Separate data showed household spending fell 1.6 percent in  August from a year earlier, a sign the rising cost of daily  necessities may be weighing on consumer spending.      Such weak signs may be discussed at the BOJ's two-day rate  review that ends on Friday, although the central bank is widely  expected to keep its monetary settings unchanged.      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 positive reading means optimists  outnumber pessimists.  
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