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Monday June 11 12:44 AM ET
Japan GDP Shrinks, Recession Fears Rise
By Yonggi Kang
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's economy contracted in the first three months of this year, government data showed on Monday, raising fears that the world's second biggest economy is slipping into its fourth recession in a decade.
Gross domestic product (GDP (news - web sites)), the broadest measure of economic activity, dipped 0.2 percent in January to March from the last quarter, or an annualized drop of 0.8 percent, after a revised 0.6 percent growth in the October-December period.
The data, worse than the 0.2 percent rise expected by economists, showed business investment slipping following a cooling in exports to key markets such as the United States and Asia, while consumer spending stalled and prices fell.
``It seems everything has weakened slightly. I'm a bit worried,'' said Finance Minister Masajuro Shiokawa. ``But I do feel the actual economy has more strength than the figures show.''
Kazuhiko Ogata, senior economist at HSBC Securities, said he expected the economy to continue contracting in the second, third and fourth quarters this year. ``I think the economy has started to enter a recessionary phase,'' he said.
Some were bolder, declaring Japan already in recession -- technically defined as two straight quarters of falls in GDP -- given mounting signs of weakness in the April to June period.
``The recession is here,'' said Merrill Lynch chief economist Jesper Koll. ``The downturn in capital investment expenditure started a little earlier than expected...we expect that to continue throughout the year.''
The gloomier picture threatens to trip up Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's reforms aimed at reining in government debt, and could give more resonance to calls for a return to the kind of government spending that has landed Japan with the industrialized world's worst debt burden -- the exact policy Koizumi had hoped to stamp out when he took office six weeks ago.
Economics Minister Heizo Takenaka described the figures as a ``sad reality'' which underscored the need for structural reforms rather than government spending. A government spokesman, Yasuo Fukuda, added that talk of an extra budget looked premature.
Japan's economy last contracted in the July-September quarter of 2000 when GDP shrunk by 0.7 percent.
YEN WILTS AFTER 'GRIM' REPORT
The data knocked the yen down against the dollar to 121.18 from around 120.90 in New York on Friday, while in Tokyo's gloomy stock market, which has grown accustomed to disappointing news about the economy, the figures were taken in stride.
The benchmark Nikkei average (^N225 - news) finished the morning session off a mere 0.21 percent at 13,402, hurt by falls in high-technology stocks following a revenue warning from U.S.-based Juniper Networks Inc.
``The data was not a surprise,'' said Takashi Miyazaki, senior strategist at UFJ Partners Asset Management, which oversees 3.11 trillion yen ($25.73 billion) in investments. ''The market has already been ready for severe economic conditions.''
For fiscal 2000/01 that ended in March, the economy grew 0.9 percent, below the government's forecast of 1.2 percent growth, the Cabinet Office said.
FLAT CONSUMER SPENDING
Private consumption, which takes up about 60 percent of the economy, was unchanged. Economists had expected a stronger figure due to a technical factor as shoppers rushed to replace big ticket items before April when a new recycling law came into effect and raised the cost of throwing out old appliances.
``The figures, particularly consumption, were weaker than expected. That could be because of a sharp fall in single-household spending,'' said Daiwa Institute of Research senior economist Hitoshi Suzuki.
The economy was also dragged down by flagging exports, which fell by 3.6 percent -- the first drop since January-March 1999.
A 1.0 percent decline in corporate capital spending, the second largest component of the economy and a key driving force of growth in recent years, also cut into the quarter and is considered one of the biggest risks going forward.
``There is a debate in Japan whether we're going to be experiencing a hard or soft landing. This report suggests, if anything, that we might be hitting the runway with no landing gear,'' said WestLB Panmure economist Andrew Shipley.
``The report makes grim reading,'' he said.
The prospect of Japan on the brink of another recession little more than a year after its last one drove up long-term interest rates on speculation that the Bank of Japan will keep its ultra-easy zero interest rate policy in place for some time.
RECESSION WORRIES
If April to June GDP contracts, Japan would enter its fourth recession since 1990. In 1992, GDP fell for two straight quarters, in 1993 it contracted for three straight quarters and in 1999 it fell for another two straight quarters.
``All the components of demand are starting to fall and the government is not willing to come up with public spending measures to support the economy,'' said Ogata at HSBC.
``Thus, the economy will likely recede soon and there is danger of it falling into a deflationary spiral.''
(With additional reporting Yoko Nishikawa, Ritsuko Ando, Shinichi Kishima and Tamawa Kadoya)
Monday June 11, 1:23 am Eastern Time
Tokyo stocks droop, high-techs extend slide
(UPDATE: Updates to midafternoon)
TOKYO, June 11 (Reuters) - Tokyo stocks were lower in midafternoon on Monday due to weak gross domestic product (GDP) data and a bearish outlook from a U.S. network equipment maker which battered high-tech shares such as Advantest Corp .
``This GDP data is slowly delivering a body blow to the market,'' said Hiroshi Sato, equities general manager at Cosmo Securities.
``With GDP numbers for April-June unlikely to be much better than January-March, some people must be thinking it would be better to stay away from techs for a while.''
Japan's GDP dipped 0.2 percent in January-March from the previous quarter, worse than a 0.2 percent rise expected by economists, raising fears the world's second-largest economy is slipping into its fourth recession in a decade.
GDP rose 0.6 percent in the October-December quarter.
The benchmark Nikkei average was down 191.26 points or 1.42 percent at 13,238.96 at 0459 GMT, while the capital-weighted TOPIX index (^TOPX - news) fell 9.56 points or 0.73 percent to 1,308.53.
Advantest, Japan's number one maker of semiconductor testing devices, fell 7.20 percent to 11,990 yen and Tokyo Electron Ltd , a top maker of semiconductor-manufacturing equipment, lost 6.21 percent to 7,860.
High-tech issues came under pressure because investor sentiment was rattled by a weaker revenue forecast from U.S. network equipment maker Juniper Networks (NasdaqNM:JNPR - news), which fanned concerns over earnings prospects in the technology sector.
In contrast to techs, auto shares benefited indirectly from the GDP data, since the softer-than-anticipated numbers pushed down the yen.
Honda Motor Co Ltd gained 1.74 percent to 5,250 yen and Mazda Motor Corp put on 3.81 percent to 300 yen.
A weak yen boosts exporters' overseas revenues when converted into the Japanese currency.
The dollar was quoted at 121.25/31 yen in afternoon trade, compared to 120.44/47 in late Tokyo on Friday. |