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Free AccessMNI POLITICAL RISK - Trump Rounds Out Cabinet Nominations
MNI POLITICAL RISK ANALYSIS - Week Ahead 25 Nov-1 Dec
REPEAT: MNI DATA ANALYSIS: Japan Mar Household Spending Dips
Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 05:34 GMT May 8/01:34 EST May 8
--Japan Mar Real Avg Household Spending -0.7% Y/Y; MNI Median +1.3%
--Japan Mar S/A Real Avg Household Spending -0.1% M/M; Feb -1.5%
--Japan Govt Keeps View on Spending: Pickup Stalling
--Japan Mar Per-Household Consumption Trend Index Real -1.6% Y/Y
--Japan Mar Total Consumption Trend Index Real +0.5% Y/Y
TOKYO (MNI) - Japan's real average spending by households with two or more
people posted the second straight year-on-year drop in March, down 0.7% after
adjustment for the gap caused by using two different survey methods, following
-0.9% in February, data released Tuesday by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and
Communications showed.
The severe winter weather with heavy snow in some regions dampened
consumption in the first two months of 2018. March saw mild weather, which
supported some spending but was not strong enough to boost Q1 figures.
Economists expect the gross domestic product for the January-March quarter
to be flat both on quarter and at an annualized pace, as solid capital
investment is offset by weak private consumption. They do not read too much into
today's household spending data in forecasting Q1 GDP as demand-side data
accounts for only 15% of the data used for estimating private consumption in the
GDP.
The ministry left its assessment on household spending unchanged from the
previous month, saying "the pickup is stalling." Last month, it downgraded its
view for the first time since November 2015.
The key points from the monthly Family Income and Expenditure Survey on
Households.
* March spending came in much weaker than the MNI median economist forecast
for a 1.3% rise. The decrease was led by lower expenditures on home maintenance
and repairs, compared with a year before when the government's subsidy program
pushed up spending on renovations. The March spending decrease was also due to a
continued decline in the use of landline phones as well as a one-off drop in
payments of mobile communications which were delayed into April. In March,
spending on automobiles and private university tuitions rose on year but these
items tend to fluctuate from month to month.
* Average real spending also posted the second straight month-on-month drop
in March on a seasonally adjusted basis but the pace of decrease decelerated to
-0.1% from -1.5% in February. The core spending index, which excludes housing,
motor vehicles and other volatile items (close to private consumption patterns
in GDP data) fell 0.6% on month in March, also the second straight m/m drop
after 2.2% in February.
* In January-March, average real spending by total households (including
one-person households) fell 1.2% on quarter on a seasonally adjusted basis after
-0.3% in October-December, the third straight quarterly drop, while adjusted
spending by households with two or more people rose 0.5% on quarter in Q1 after
-0.6% in Q4, the first q/q rise in three quarters.
* In fiscal 2017, average real household spending rose 0.7% after -1.6% in
fiscal 2016, posting the first rise since +0.4% in fiscal 2013.
* The average real income of households with salaried workers slumped 3.8%
on year in March after adjustment for the statistical gap, marking the third
straight y/y drop after -2.4% in February.
* The Household Consumption Trend Index, indicating per-household spending
patterns, fell a real 1.6% on year in March vs. -1.5% in February, while the
Total Consumption Trend Index, which is designed to show similar consumption
patterns in the total domestic output, rose a real 0.5% on year vs. +0.6% in the
previous month.
--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.