Japan’s Economy Watchers Index Sinks in April
Japan’s economy watchers index stayed below the breakeven threshold of 50 in April, falling further to 47.4 from a level of 49.8 in March. These numbers compare to a reading of 51.3 in February. Over 12 months, the economy watchers index has fallen by 5.9 points. It made 3.3 points of that drop over six months and 2.8 points of that drop over three months. Taking the April level of the economy watchers index and expressing it as a percentile standing, the level is at 49.8%. A standing below its 50th percentile means it is below its median when ranked among data since April 2003.
The economy watchers subindexes across industries and the other functional categories show slippage (diffusion below 50) for each one between March and April. In addition, all categories weakened in March compared to February except for the reading for eating and drinking places and the reading for employment. And many March diffusion readings are below 50. The economy watchers index is clearly on a run of weakness.
Overall the current index ranks below its historic median as we noted above; components that are below their median values are retailing, manufacturing corporations, and employment. The employment reading is the weakest one in the table with the standing only at its 29.6 percentile. At that ranking, it sits near the top of the lower third of all observations since April 2003. That's an all-too-weak reading for such an important index for the economy.
Sequential changes in the current index show over three months all components are lower on balance except nonmanufacturing firms. Over six months, all components are lower on balance except nonmanufacturing firms and housing. Over 12 months all components are lower on balance except for housing. The Bank of Japan has had some concern about inflation and these concerns have become a bit more two-sided; a weakening economy is not going to allow the BOJ to raise interest rates and to proceed in its objective of returning monetary policy to a range of normalcy. Consumer spending in Japan has been weakening as well. Overall, the economy watchers index fits into a profile of an economy that's weakening rather than strengthening.
The future index The economy watchers index has a future component. This component also weakened in April compared to March and has slipped below a diffusion value of 50, dropping to 48.5 in April from 51.2 in March. This indicates falling expectations. The percentile standing of the future index is in its 47.8 percentile, below its historic median also on data back to April 2003. All the readings for the future index have diffusion values below 50 in April except for employment, which moved up slightly to 51.3 in April from 49.4 in March. And all the components in April weakened compared to March except for that employment reading. In addition, all the components in March had weakened compared to February except for retailing. This gain is broad-based weakening clustering at values close to the diffusion level of 50 that marks the dividing line between expansion and contraction.
Like the current index, the future index is mired in a patch of weakness. Over three months all the future indexes are lower on balance with the headline falling by 4 points over three months. Over six months all of the components are lower on balance except for retailing that is up by 0.7 points. The future headline is lower by 1.3 points over six months. Over 12 months all the components are lower without exception and the headline is lower by 6.1 points.
Clearly, expectations have been scaled back for Japan’s economic performance. The headline’s 47.8 percentile standing leaves it below its historic median. This result is, in part, generated by a housing reading below its median at the 39.1 percentile and by manufacturers with a 39.5 percentile standing. Employment has a 43.5 percentile standing which is below its median but not as weak relative to other past future readings as the current index for employment is weak compared to its past index values. So as weak as the current economy is on the employment side, the future economy doesn't have the same degree of pessimism associated with it as the current index.
Taken together, the current and future readings do not give us the economic picture the Bank of Japan is hoping for. With the yen weakness becoming more of an issue, the BOJ would far prefer a strengthening economy that would allow it to raise interest rates that would help to support the yen. However, raising interest rates to support the yen is not going to be possible if the domestic economy is weakening. Japan once again finds itself in a difficult spot. If this weakening trend continues, it's going to be a demanding situation for policymakers. For now, past trends in consumer spending as well as the current future profiles for the economy watchers index leave the economy in a difficult spot for policy decisions.
Robert Brusca
AuthorMore in Author Profile »Robert A. Brusca is Chief Economist of Fact and Opinion Economics, a consulting firm he founded in Manhattan. He has been an economist on Wall Street for over 25 years. He has visited central banking and large institutional clients in over 30 countries in his career as an economist. Mr. Brusca was a Divisional Research Chief at the Federal Reserve Bank of NY (Chief of the International Financial markets Division), a Fed Watcher at Irving Trust and Chief Economist at Nikko Securities International. He is widely quoted and appears in various media. Mr. Brusca holds an MA and Ph.D. in economics from Michigan State University and a BA in Economics from the University of Michigan. His research pursues his strong interests in non aligned policy economics as well as international economics. FAO Economics’ research targets investors to assist them in making better investment decisions in stocks, bonds and in a variety of international assets. The company does not manage money and has no conflicts in giving economic advice.