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REPEAT: MNI INSIGHT: BOJ Sees Balanced Recovery

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 03:41 GMT Nov 15/22:41 EST Nov 14
--Japan Govt Offl: Not Yet Sure About iPhone Demand in Q4
By Hiroshi Inoue and Max Sato
     TOKYO (MNI) - Despite the weakness in private consumption shown in the
third quarter GDP data released Wednesday, Bank of Japan officials continue to
believe that Japan's economy will expand moderately starting in the fourth
quarter, backed by balanced domestic and overseas demand, MNI understands.
     The slower Q3 GDP growth came as no surprise to BOJ officials, who expected
private consumption to have slumped due to the effects of bad weather and in
reaction to unusually high spending in the second quarter.
     Private consumption, which accounts for about 60% of GDP, fell 0.5% on
quarter in Q3, the first drop in seven quarters after a revised +0.7% in Q2. It
was weaker than the MNI median forecast for -0.3% and pushed down overall growth
by 0.3 percentage point.
     The long stretch of rainy days and typhoon weather hurt tourism and
restaurants while replacement demand seen in April-June for automobiles
purchased with government fuel efficiency subsidies faded in July-September.
     In addition, orders for the latest smartphone models were slow, as some
customers waited for the November release of the iPhone X instead of rushing to
buy the iPhone 8, which went on the market in September.
     Whether private consumption will show a clear rebound in the final quarter
of 2017 is uncertain, government officials said. The economy seems to have made
a mixed start to Q3, with big typhoons in October hurting some sales and lower
temperatures boosting demand for winter clothing.
     "We don't know yet whether people waited for the iPhone X and are actually
placing high orders for the latest model," a government economist told MNI.
     "We will have to see whether imports of smartphones are rising in
October-December after slumping in July-September and whether household spending
and retail sales are rebounding in the current quarter," he said.
     "We will also have to see whether domestic demand is peaking out during the
current sustained economic recovery, and whether the pickup in household income
means things are getting better from here or we are seeing the peak in lagging
indicators," the official said.
     Weak income growth is holding back consumption, but BOJ economists don't
expect the underlying trend of household spending -- excluding temporary
fluctuations -- to weaken in coming months.
     BOJ officials don't see the need to change the central bank's latest
assessment that "private consumption is expected to follow a moderate increasing
trend as the employment and income situations continue to improve."
     Japan's economy for the July-September quarter posted a modest 0.3% rise on
quarter, or an annualized 1.4%, as a rebound in net exports more than offset the
slump in consumer spending.
     The preliminary GDP data also showed that business investment rose 0.2% on
quarter in Q3, as expected, for the fourth straight q/q increase after rising
0.5% in Q2. It made zero contribution to the Q3 GDP growth, however.
     The usual pattern for the rest of the fiscal year is for capital investment
plans to tend to slow as companies push back some of their plans into the next
fiscal year starting in April.
     But capital investment is likely to remain supported by labor-saving
investment in response to labor shortages and a possible rise in economic growth
expectations, the BOJ believes.
     BOJ economists will monitor whether the expected slowdown in capital
investment plans is within the historical range or weaker than usual through the
bank's next quarterly Tankan business survey due out on Dec. 15.
     The GDP data show net exports of goods and services made a positive 0.5
percentage point contribution to total domestic output, in line with
expectations (the MNI survey median forecast was +0.4 percentage point).
     It was the first positive contribution in two quarters after pushing down
Q2 GDP growth by 0.2 percentage point. Shipments of electronics parts and
devices as well as automobiles led Q3 exports to a 1.5% rise on quarter after a
0.2% drop in Q2 and a 1.9% rise in Q1.
     BOJ officials expect the export uptrend to continue as demand for
Japanese-made IT-related goods and capital goods used in factories around the
world is likely to remain firm given the continued rise in the global economy.
     The officials are not overly concerned about the drop in the BOJ's real
export index in September, which was caused by what they see as temporarily weak
demand for automobiles and related goods as well as IT-related goods. Demand for
electronics parts for smartphones is picking up, the BOJ believes.
     The weak exports of IT-related goods in September didn't mean that global
demand has weakened, BOJ officials argue.
     The latest BOJ data show that the real export index fell 5.4% on month in
September. The index for automobiles and related goods dipped 7.2% and that for
IT-related goods was down 5.7%.
     Despite the September drop, the real export index for the third quarter was
up 1.9% on quarter, the first rise in two quarters.
     Industrial production is expected to fluctuate month to month in tandem
with developments in exports and domestic demand, but factory output is likely
to continue posting solid gains for the time being on the back of the recent
increase in demand at home and abroad, BOJ officials believe.
     Industrial production fell a seasonally adjusted 1.1% in September, but
posted the sixth consecutive quarterly gain, up 0.4% on quarter in Q3 after a
gain of 2.1% in Q2.
     The government has forecast factory output will rebound 4.7% on month in
October before slipping 0.9% in November. Adjusting for the upward bias in
output plans, the government projected production would actually rise a more
modest 2.4% on month in October.
     The BOJ's focus remains on how a continued economic recovery affects
consumer prices and whether inflation expectations, whose improvement has
paused, will rise in the coming quarters.
--MNI BEIJING Bureau; +1 202-371-2121; email: john.carter@mni-news.com
--MNI Tokyo Bureau; tel: +81 90-4670-5309; email: max.sato@marketnews.com
--MNI Beijing Bureau; +86 (10) 8532-5998; email: vince.morkri@marketnews.com

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