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Free AccessMNI BRIEF: China November PMI Rises Further Above 50
MNI US Macro Weekly: Politics To The Fore
REPEAT:MNI DATA ANALYSIS:Japan Machine Orders Show Solid Capex
--Repeating Story Published at 1009 JST (2009 ET Tuesday)
--MNI: Japan Nov Core Machine Orders +5.7% M/M; MNI Median -1.2%
--Japan Nov Core Machine Orders Post 2nd Straight M/M Rise
--Japan Govt Keeps View: Machine Orders Show Signs of Pickup
By Max Sato
TOKYO (MNI) - Japanese machinery orders unexpectedly posted a second
straight month-on-month rise in November, indicating continued solid demand for
business investment in early 2018, but officials said Wednesday that the recent
flat to slight uptrend in orders is not strong enough for the government upgrade
its view.
The November gain was led by a large one-off order from wholesalers for
cranes and conveyers and a rebound in orders from construction firms, suggesting
companies are trying to make their operations more efficient amid serious labor
shortages in some sectors.
Demand for industrial robots remain strong, official said.
--CORE ORDERS 9-YEAR HIGH
Core private-sector machinery orders, which exclude volatile orders for
power generation equipment and ships, rose 5.7% on month in November after
rising 5.0% in October and falling 8.1% in September.
The November rise was stronger than the MNI survey median forecast for a
1.2% drop (forecast range: -4.7% to +3.9%) and was the highest increase since
+8.0% in July 2017.
The level of core machinery orders at Y899.2 billion in November was the
highest since Y931.9 billion in June 2008.
The consecutive rise in the leading indicator of capital investment raised
the possibility that core orders might have increased in the October-December
quarter, instead of falling 3.5% on quarter as projected by the Cabinet Office
earlier.
If core orders were unchanged on month in December, it would mark a 4.1%
rise in Q4. and if they fell 11.4%, Q4 results would be flat.
--GOVT KEEPS VIEW ON PICKUP
But officials remain cautious as machinery orders tend to fluctuate widely
from month to month.
"The three-month moving average rose only 0.7% in the September-November
period, which is not strong enough for us to revise up our view," a Cabinet
Office official told MNI.
Based on the November data, the Cabinet Office maintained its assessment,
saying "Machinery orders are showing signs of a pickup."
The three-month moving average of core orders was essentially flat in
October, down 0.1%, from the July-September period, when it rose 0.8%, which was
a third straight rise.
Core orders from the manufacturing sector dipped 0.2% on month in November,
the first drop in two months in payback for a 7.4% gain in October, while those
from the non-manufacturing sector jumped 9.8%, the second straight rise after
+1.1% in October.
Orders from the non-manufacturing sector had been lackluster in recent
months. But orders from the construction industry rebounded in November after
showing a pullback. Many orders had been placed before higher emission control
took effect in September.
--MNI Tokyo Bureau; tel: +81 90-4670-5309; email: max.sato@marketnews.com
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Why MNI
MNI is the leading provider
of intelligence and analysis on the Global Fixed Income, Foreign Exchange and Energy markets. We use an innovative combination of real-time analysis, deep fundamental research and journalism to provide unique and actionable insights for traders and investors. Our "All signal, no noise" approach drives an intelligence service that is succinct and timely, which is highly regarded by our time constrained client base.Our Head Office is in London with offices in Chicago, Washington and Beijing, as well as an on the ground presence in other major financial centres across the world.