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Strategies & Market Trends : Asia Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bosco who wrote (8733)6/10/1999 9:05:00 AM
From: Sam  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9980
 
Japan Economy Surges 1.9% in Last Quarter; Government
Downplays Strength
By Demetri Sevastopulo with reporting by Nathan Westby, Mayumi Otsuma, Mikako Nakajima and
Kae Inoue

Japan Economy Unexpectedly Surged 1.9% in Last Qtr (Update2)
(Adds new lead paragraph, comment in 2nd, BOJ intervention in
4th paragraph and rewrites throughout.)

Tokyo, June 10 (Bloomberg) -- Japan's economy grew at its
fastest pace in three years last quarter -- fueled by unexpectedly
strong consumer and corporate spending -- in an astonishing
turnaround that the government warned should not be mistaken for a
full-blown recovery.

Gross domestic product -- the total value of goods and
services produced -- rose a stronger-than-expected 1.9 percent,
compared with a drop of 0.8 percent in the previous quarter.
Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News expected an expansion of just
0.1 percent.
''Private consumption and private capital expenditure are
incredible, as in unbelievable,'' said Richard Jerram, head
economist at ING Barings Securities Ltd., who expected GDP to be
unchanged last quarter. ''It's positive news in the sense that the
economy is growing, but we can't get any more excited than that.''

Government officials played down the GDP number, saying they
need to see more evidence of a recovery from the country's longest
recession since World War II. Currency traders said the Bank of
Japan bought dollars to halt a sudden rise in the yen -- something
the government declined to confirm - which occurred after the GDP
numbers were released.
''If the central bank intervened that means the Ministry of
Finance is not convinced of a recovery,'' said Shuji Shirota,
senior economist at Societe Generale Securities Ltd. ''If they were
convinced, they wouldn't care if the yen rises.''

Details

Spending by companies rose 2.5 percent in the January-March
period from the previous quarter, while housing investment rose 1.2
percent, the EPA said. Consumer spending rose 1.2 percent from the
previous quarter, the first increase in a year.
''People shouldn't get so excited by the numbers for just one
quarter,'' said Taichi Sakaiya, head of the Economic Planning
Agency that released the GDP figures. ''We will have to look
closely at GDP in the next quarter.''

Stocks rose before the report was released as the GDP figures
were published by the Nikkei Quick news service. The benchmark
Nikkei 225 stock index rose 2.9 percent to 17,102, its highest in a
month.

The dollar fell more than a yen in value as soon as the
figures were released, though it later rose after the Bank of Japan
bought dollars, traders said. The yield on the benchmark No. 213
Japanese government bond rose 5.5 basis points to 1.625 percent on
concern a return to growth could lead to inflation.

The GDP turnaround increases the odds that Prime Minister
Keizo Obuchi's government will reach its target of 0.5 percent
growth in the year ending next March.

The government's stance on the GDP figures suggest that an
extra budget to boost spending on public works spending -- which
rose 10.3 percent last quarter -- is still on the cards.

Whether the government postpones or delays extra spending to
pay for more public works ''depends if they believe their own
numbers or not,'' said Jerram. ''You would hope that they don't get
too carried away with today's number.''

Spending Conundrum

Yet some members of the government are likely to object to
more spending given the apparent strength of today's number.
''With today's figures, legislators will probably take time in
pondering the size of a new spending package,'' said Mamoru
Yamazaki, senior economist at Paribas Capital Markets Ltd. ''It's
unlikely the size of spending will be boosted.''

To spur growth and stem the rising jobless rate -- now at a
record 4.8 percent -- the government is preparing to spend as much
as 10 trillion yen ($82.6 billion) through public works spending
and job creation, legislators and officials have said.

Surprisingly high spending on facilities and equipment boosted
the economy in the last quarter but the government said that this
may not be a self-sustaining trend.

Small- and medium-sized companies have benefited from a
government emergency plan providing 20 trillion yen in loan
guarantees to help secure financing as the nation's banks curbed
lending causing bankruptcies to soar. About 16 trillion yen in
guarantees have already been provided.

A recent stream of restructuring announcements by the likes of
Sony Corp., NEC Corp., Omron Corp., Mitsubishi Electric Corp. and
All Nippon Airways Co. has fueled concern that increasing
unemployment and falling income will keep consumer confidence
anemic. Today's numbers back up recent evidence that smaller
companies are starting to help the economy.
''There has been too much focus on restructuring by large
companies,'' said Peter Morgan, senior economist at HSBC Securities
Japan Ltd. ''The easing of the credit crunch in recent months has
led to a significant rebound of capital spending by smaller
firms.''

Small Businesses

Yet large listed companies only employ about one in ten
workers. Smaller companies -- the backbone of the economy -- may
now begin hiring and help steer Japan onto the road to recovery.
''Small companies are swimming in so much cash that they could
start investing in the stock market if they wanted,'' said Koichiro
Eguchi, spokesman for the National Federation of Credit Guarantee
Corp., which is responsible for approving applications for the
government guarantees.

Banks have accepted 7.5 trillion yen in capital injections
under the government program, said Eguchi. This gives companies
room to start increasing spending on equipment and facilities.

Consumer spending -- which accounts for 60 percent of the
economy -- remains the key to a strong recovery. In the January to
March quarter, consumer spending rose 1.2 percent, the first rise
in a year.
''Consumer spending is still suffering from falling incomes
and rising unemployment but it appears to have improved somewhat
from the beginning of the year,'' said Isao Nakauchi, founder and
chief executive officer of Daiei Inc., Japan's second largest
supermarket operator.
''The rise in spending may have been due to strong housing
starts as consumers increased spending on services,'' said Michael
Naldrett, an economist at Dresdner Kleinwort Benson

Housing investment rose 1.2 percent in the January-March
quarter from the previous quarter, amid low interest rates and tax
breaks on mortgage payments.
''Overall demand will continue at least until June as
consumers can take out low interest rate mortgages,'' said Hidehiro
Yamaguchi, spokesman for Sekisui House, a large Osaka-based housing
developer, last month.



To: Bosco who wrote (8733)6/10/1999 9:15:00 AM
From: Sam  Respond to of 9980
 
Yen Erases Gains Against Dollar on Speculation Bank of Japan Selling Yen
By Tom Giles

Yen Falls Against Dollar on Speculation BOJ Sold Yen (Update4)
(Rewrites 1st paragraph.)

London, June 10 (Bloomberg) -- The yen fell against the
dollar on speculation the Bank of Japan intervened to halt
today's rally. The currency erased gains it made earlier on
figures showing a surge in Japanese growth.
''The last thing the authorities want is a strong yen to
undermine the recovery,'' said Keith Edmonds, an economist at IBJ
International. ''It's clear after the sharp appreciation on the
back of the growth figures that official concern against that
jump is being shown.''

The yen fell as low as 119.95 per dollar, down from a high
for the day of 117.57 yen and compared its London closing price
of 119.31 yen. It was recently at 118.92 yen. The euro rose as
high as $1.0524 from $1.0466, on signs European growth is
accelerating and amid hopes for an end to the war in Kosovo.
''An excessive rise in the yen is not desirable for the
Japanese and the global economies,'' said Haruhiko Kuroda,
director general of the Finance Ministry's International Bureau,
though he declined to say whether there was any intervention.

Traders in London and Tokyo said the central bank sold
dollars when the U.S. currency fell below 118 yen. Spokespeople
at the central bank and ministry of finance declined to comment
on the speculation.
''All the aggressive buying was coming out of Tokyo, and
that gives a bit more credence'' to speculation the central bank
was intervening, said Rob Newman, a currency trader at Bank of
Nova Scotia.

Growth Surges

The Japanese currency was bolstered in early trading by a
report showing the economy grew by 1.9 percent in the first
quarter, compared with a drop of 0.8 percent in the previous
quarter and outpacing the 0.1 percent gain anticipated by
economists in a Bloomberg News survey.

Japanese officials, have repeatedly said they don't want the
yen to rise too fast, as that would crimp exports and smother
growth. Finance Minister Kiichi Miyazawa said today that big
shifts in the currency market are ''undesirable,'' though he's
not concerned about specific currency levels. He also said it's
difficult to be too optimistic about the economy, though it's
rebounding faster than expected.

The euro rose against the dollar as North Atlantic Treaty
forces prepared to halt an 11-week bombing offensive. Yugoslavia
pledged to pull its 40,000 troops out of Kosovo within 11 days,
making way for a NATO-led international security force to begin
escorting more than 1 million ethnic Albanian refugees back home.
NATO said Serb troops began moving north out of Kosovo today.
''This is positive for the euro because it removes an
element of underlying weakness, just when the euro is being
propelled by signs of strong growth in Europe,'' said Giorgio
Radaelli, head of European market research at First Chicago Bank,
who said the euro could rise to between $1.12 and $1.15 in the
final quarter of the year.

A report today showed industrial production in Germany, the
euro area's largest economy, rose 1 percent in April, after
falling 0.1 percent in March. That beat the 0.3 percent output
increase forecast by economists in a Bloomberg poll.

Germany's unemployment rate fell to 10.5 percent in May from
10.6 percent in April, the Bundesbank reported today, although it
attributed the decline to a change in the definition of an
unemployed person and in the base year. The government's
unemployment rate, which isn't adjusted for seasonal swings, fell
to 10.2 from 10.7 percent in April.

Further evidence of recovery in Germany could lift the euro
in the coming weeks, traders said.