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. |