<Japan> Economy shows glimpses of LIFE.
Hi Lee: Looks like not all is lost in Japan,get a load of this. ================================
Top News Thu, 31 Dec 1998, 8:49am EST
Japan Economy Shows Glimpses of Life, May Pave Way for Growth in 1999
Tokyo, Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) -- A year ago, Japan's chief economic planner confidently predicted the nation's economy would start growing before the cherry blossoms bloomed on the banks of Washington's Potomac River, in April.
The cherry blossoms have long since died, business confidence is at a 4-1/2 year low and the planner, Koji Omi, has lost his job. Yet after four straight quarters of economic contraction, the world's second-largest economy is showing glimpses of life that suggest the foundations are being laid for higher corporate profits and renewed growth in the business year beginning April 1.
Coca-Cola Co. sales are rising. Inventories and bankruptcies are falling. Honda Motor Co. can barely keep up with demand for its mini-vehicles. And personal computers are flying off Tokyo store shelves.
All this is good news for recession-weary Asia because Japan's economy accounts for about two-thirds of the region's output of goods and services. Any growth will also help the global economy, which faces a ''substantial risk'' of falling into recession if Japan fails to recover, the World Bank said. ''We have an international responsibility to revive the Japanese economy,'' said Takashi Imai, chairman of Nippon Steel Corp., the world's largest steel producer, and head of Keidanren, Japan's most influential business lobby. ''The next few months are critical, but I'm hoping by the end of fiscal 1999 the economy will be on track to grow by 2 percent annually.''
To be sure, no one expects dramatic recovery and not all economists are convinced Japan will soon emerge from its worst recession in more than 50 years. The Japanese government expects 0.5 percent growth in the year beginning April 1, following a 2.2 percent contraction in the year to March 31 and 0.7 percent the previous year.
In addition, Japan's eighth stimulus package in six years, which emphasized public works spending at the expense of a cut in sales tax for consumers, had the unwelcome side effect of pushing up interest rates. The yield on benchmark 10- year government bonds may rise as high as 2.54 percent next year from a record low of 0.70 percent on Oct. 7, according to 20 economists and investors polled by Bloomberg.
Getting Better
Yet most executives say 1999 will almost certainly be an improvement over 1998, and they are adjusting their sales and profit targets to fit that expectation. Their confidence stems in part from a belief the government's latest 24 trillion yen ($207 billion) stimulus package and its 60 trillion yen bailout of Japan's banks will spark spending and enable banks to start making more loans to companies next year.
''I'm expecting the Japanese economy to recover after April,'' said Katsuhiko Kawasoe, president of Mitsubishi Motors Corp., the fourth-largest automaker, which forecasts 7.3 percent higher sales in Japan in 1999 than this year. ''We feel like we're starting to come back,'' said Toyota Motor Corp. President Hiroshi Okuda. Japan's largest automaker is increasing domestic production 1 percent in 1999 to meet an expected 6 percent jump in sales in Japan.
The auto executives noted that sales of mini-vehicles, from Honda's Life wagon to Suzuki Motor Corp.'s Jimny sport- utility and Kei car, rose 30 percent in November, the second straight monthly increase. Honda is boosting production of mini-vehicles by 30 percent this month and next.
Personal Computers
There are other signs of nascent growth. Sales of personal computers, televisions, videocassette recorders, washing machines and refrigerators are rising at large electronics stores such as Laox Co. and Kojima Co. An industry association expects higher sales of both audio and video equipment next year, with particular growth in car navigation systems and digital audio disc players.
''Some industry indexes suggest symptoms of a recovery in consumer spending, and (sales of) some consumer products, such as air conditioners and washing machines, suggest recovery,'' said Toshiba Corp., the world's biggest maker of notebook computers.
Japan's personal computer market expanded 7.9 percent between July and September from a year earlier, led by strong sales of Sony Corp.'s VAIO laptop computers, Microsoft Corp.'s Windows 98 operating software and Apple Computer Inc.'s iMac PC, said IDC Japan Ltd., a research company.
Coca-Cola sales in Japan increased 4 percent in November, the first rise since the world's largest soft-drink maker increased prices at the beginning of the year, according to an analyst survey of several bottlers in Tokyo.
Looking Up?
There's more. Public works starts rose 13.3 percent in October on the year, following a 37 percent rise in September. Inventories fell for the seventh consecutive month in November, setting the stage for a recovery in industrial production next year. Starts of owner-occupied homes funded with government-backed loans have risen three months in a row. And corporate bankruptcies fell 5.3 percent in November, the first decline in 23 months.
If these trends continue, many companies can expect higher net income in the year beginning April 1. For the year that ends March 31, non-financial companies expect aggregate profit to be 21 percent lower than last year after falling 81 percent in the first half, Bloomberg figures show.
''We expect profits will rise because the fall in domestic demand has bottomed out, inventory restructuring has been completed, the U.S. and European economies are strong, and other company restructuring plans are taking effect,'' said Daiwa Securities Co. Daiwa, Japan's second-largest broker, forecasts net income at non-financial companies will rise an average 53 percent in fiscal 1999.
Cost Cutting
Expectations of profit growth and an end to the recession next year stem in part from efforts by hundreds of manufacturers, financial institutions, retailers and trading companies to cut costs and streamline their operations at home and overseas.
For example, Nissho Iwai Corp., the sixth-largest trading company, said yesterday it plans to cut 1,100 jobs, or about 25 percent of its employees, and shut some overseas offices because of Asia's recession.
Nissan Motor Co., the maker of midsize Maxima sedans, plans to sell assets and slash costs to trim 1 trillion yen, or about a quarter of its debt, by 2001. Mitsubishi Motors plans to cut jobs and shave 350 billion yen in costs by March 2001 in its bid to earn a group profit next fiscal year.
Japan's top three airlines -- Japan Airlines Co., All Nippon Airways Co. and Japan Air System Co. -- are also taking steps to return to profitability by cutting jobs, lowering fares up to 50 percent, canceling money-losing flights and delaying aircraft purchases.
JAL, which has lost money the past five years, is slashing 2,300 of 17,863 jobs by March 2002, mainly through early retirement. It hopes to reduce interest-bearing debt by 210 billion yen to 1.29 trillion yen by March 2002.
Daiei Inc., Japan's largest retailer, plans to cut costs by 40 billion yen by March 31, in part by shutting 19 money- losing stores. Sogo Co., a parent company of the group that operates 14 department stores overseas and 29 Japan stores, will close its London outlet and won't open a planned store in Australia.
The corporate retrenchment from overseas marks a reversal from Japan's buying spree in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when some U.S. politicians complained about Japanese purchases of such landmarks as New York's Rockefeller Center. At home, job cuts related to corporate restructuring have pushed up the unemployment rate to a record 4.4 percent in November, matching that of the U.S. for the first time.
Currency Fluctuations
One economic uncertainty next year is the yen, which has risen 18 percent since Sept. 30 and was recently quoted at 115.41 to the dollar. The Japanese currency's continued appreciation ''would be particularly unhelpful'' to the economy, making its exports more expensive, the International Monetary Fund said in a recent report.
Sony, which generates 70 percent of its sales overseas, in October revised down by 100 billion yen its forecast for group operating profit for the year to March 31 on expectations the dollar would buy an average 115 yen in the October-March period. That was down from earlier estimates of 135 yen.
At Sony, sales and operating profit drop 5 billion yen when the dollar falls 1 yen, said Tamotsu Iba, executive deputy president and chief financial officer. At Toyota, a 1- yen drop in the dollar costs the automaker 10 billion yen in operating profit.
''For a large part of manufacturing the big concern is whether the yen is going to stay in the 110 to 120 yen range because that's going to threaten profitability,'' said Richard Jerram, an economist at ING Baring Securities (Japan) Ltd.
The yen-dollar relationship is especially important for Japan's three top shipping companies -- Nippon Yusen KK, Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd. and Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd.
About three-quarters of the shippers' revenue is generated in dollars so the companies lose money when they bring profit back to Japan if the yen rises.
All three companies are forecasting better earnings for the year ending in March. For the half-year to March 31, Nippon Yusen based its forecast at 115 yen to the dollar, Mitsui O.S.K. at 120 yen and Kawasaki Kisen at 125 yen. If the yen strengthens, it will be difficult for them to meet their goals, the companies said.
No New Spending
Growth in Japan next year is by no means assured as prices fall and corporate capital spending plunges. Even as consumers spend more on PCs and mini-vehicles, they're spending less on travel and other cars, economists said.
With the economy still shrinking, Japanese companies plan to cut spending on factories and equipment 1.1 percent in the year to March and 1.9 percent in fiscal 1999, the government said.
That may result in further cut jobs and retrenchment of unprofitable operations, which will hurt trade and overseas investment but should have a positive long-term impact. In the next six months, however, many economists see higher unemployment, more failures of bad debt-laden banks and large companies and more mergers of companies fighting to survive.
The pessimism is reflected in the stock market, where the benchmark Nikkei 225 index has fallen 9 percent this year and 64 percent since its December 1989 high, closing at 13,842.17 yesterday.
For Shoichiro Toyoda, Toyota's chairman, the depressing numbers don't reflect the reality about Japan's economy. ''When confidence returns everything else should improve,'' he said. ''Walking around town, it's hard to find evidence of any recession.'' |