Japan's factory activity hits 4-month low as US recession clouds loom

TOKYO • Japan's factory activity growth slowed to a four-month low this month as China's Covid-19 curbs disrupted supply chains, while many other economies in Asia were also facing headwinds amid growing risks to the outlook from a potential US recession.

Australia's manufacturing activity held steady this month, data released yesterday showed, which, together with Japan's figures, come ahead of a string of European and United States purchasing managers' index (PMI) surveys due out later in the day.

The readings will be closely scrutinised as financial markets fret over sharp interest rises by the US Federal Reserve, and further aggressive tightening planned over coming months, which have substantially raised the risk of a US recession.

"The global macroeconomic outlook has deteriorated materially since end-2021," said Fitch Ratings, which slashed this year's global growth outlook to 2.9 per cent in June from 3.5 per cent in March.

"Stagflation, which is characterised by persistent high inflation, high unemployment and weak demand, has become the dominant risk theme since late first quarter of this year and a plausible potential risk scenario," it said in a report released this week.

A growing number of market players, including US investment firm Pimco, are warning of the risk of a recession as central banks across the globe tighten monetary policy to fight persistently high inflation.

A string of recent data globally showed that policymakers are walking a tight rope as they try to defuse inflation pressures without tipping their respective economies into a steep downturn.

US retail sales unexpectedly fell last month and existing home sales tumbled to a two-year low, a sign that high inflation and rising borrowing costs were starting to hurt demand.

Britain's economy unexpectedly shrank in April, adding to fears of a sharp slowdown as companies complain of rising cost of production.

In Asia, South Korea's exports for the first 10 days of June shrank almost 13 per cent year on year, underscoring the heightening risk to the region's export-driven economies.

And in China, while exporters enjoyed solid sales last month, helped by easing domestic Covid-19 curbs, many analysts expect a more challenging outlook for the world's second-biggest economy due to the Ukraine war and rising raw material costs.

The au Jibun Bank Flash Japan Manufacturing PMI slipped to 52.7 this month from 53.3 last month, marking the slowest expansion since February, the survey showed yesterday.

In a sign of the coronavirus pandemic's lingering impact, car giant Toyota Motor cut its July global production plan by 50,000 vehicles as semiconductor shortages and Covid-19 parts supply disruptions continued to curb output.

"Despite the recent easing of lockdowns in China, suppliers' delivery times continued to lengthen last month, albeit at a slightly slower pace," said Capital Economics Japan economist Marcel Thieliant.

The key for Japan will be whether consumption rebounds strongly enough from a pandemic-induced slump to offset emerging external headwinds such as an expected US slowdown, analysts say.

The PMIs of France, Germany, the euro zone, Britain and the US were due late yesterday.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on June 24, 2022, with the headline Japan's factory activity hits 4-month low as US recession clouds loom. Subscribe