Japan December Machine Orders Rebound After November Slump; Q1 Seen Up After Q4 Drop

–Govt Keeps View After Recent Downgrade: Machine Orders Pausing

By Max Sato

(MaceNews) Japanese machinery orders, the key leading indicator of business investment in equipment, posted a modest rebound in December in reaction to a plunge in November as capex plans for digitization and green transformation remain solid for fiscal 2022 ending in March, data released Thursday by the Cabinet Office showed.

In the October-December quarter, the core measure of machinery orders recorded a second consecutively quarterly drop, but the Cabinet Office expects a little over half of the decline in the second half of 2022 will be recovered in the first three months of 2023.

In the fourth-quarter GDP data released Tuesday that showed a slight rebound, business investment in equipment marked its first drop in three quarters, down 0.5% on quarter, following solid gains of 1.5% in July-September and 2.1% in April-June. Capex trimmed the GDP by 0.1 percentage point in the fourth quarter after providing a positive 0.3-point contribution in each of the previous two quarters.

The key points from machinery orders data:

* Core private-sector machinery orders, which exclude volatile orders from electric utilities and for ships, rose 1.6% from the previous month on a seasonally adjusted basis to ¥851.9 billion in December after slumping 8.3% in November. It was weaker than the median economist forecast of a 2.8% rise (forecasts ranged from 1.4% to 6.8% gains). The 5.3% rise to ¥966.0 billion in July 2022 was the largest amount since ¥973.5 billion in June 2019.

* Core orders fell 5.0% on quarter in the final quarter of 2022, coming in much weaker than the official forecast for a 3.6% rebound. It followed a 1.6% drop in July-September and an 8.1% rise in April-June. The Cabinet Office projected that core orders would rise 4.3% in the January-March quarter, led by a sharp rebound in orders from the manufacturing sector.

* Orders from manufacturers fell 2.1% on the month in December for the first rise in four months after falling 9.3% in November while those from non-manufacturers in the core measure marked the second straight drop, down 2.5%, after a 3.0% dip.

* The rebound in core orders in December was led by higher demand for computers from food processors, business machine makers and information service providers as well as demand for construction equipment from contractors and the farming, forestry and fishing sector.

* The Cabinet Office maintained its assessment after downgrading it last month for November data, saying, “Machinery orders are pausing.” The three-month moving average fell 0.6% in the October-December period after falling 2.6% in September-November.

* Core orders dipped 6.6% from a year earlier in December after falling 3.7% in November, which was the first drop in 20 months, and rising 0.4% in October. It was weaker than the median economist forecast of a 5.9% drop (forecasts ranged from 7.3% to 2.1% decreases).

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