The Pak Banker

Japan business sentiment negative for first time since 2013

- TOKYO -AP

Confidence among Japan's biggest manufactur­ers has plunged into negative territory for the first time in seven years, a key survey showed Wednesday as the coronaviru­s pandemic hits demand and disrupts production.

The Bank of Japan's March Tankan business survey-a quarterly poll of about 10,000 companies-showed a reading of minus 8 among major manufactur­ers, the first negative reading since March 2013.

The short-term business sentiment survey reports the difference between the percentage of firms that are upbeat and those that see conditions as unfavourab­le.

A negative reading means more companies are pessimisti­c than optimistic. It is considered to be the broadest indicator of how Japan Inc. is faring.

The index for non-manufactur­ers fell to plus 8 from 20 in the December 2019 survey as the virus also hit tourism, entertainm­ent and other service industries.

The confidence index for the hotels and restaurant service industry came in at a staggering minus 59.

"Negative impacts are spreading broadly in various sectors," Tsuyoshi Ueno, senior economist at NLI Research, said in a report ahead of the Tankan release.

They range from slower exports and the disruption of parts supply from China, to plunges in foreign visitors, cancellati­ons of sports and other events, and weaker stock prices combined with a higher yen, he said.

The headline index was also at the lowest level since March 2013 just before the central bank embarked on unpreceden­ted massive monetary easing in tandem with then-new Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's prospendin­g policy, known as Abenomics.

Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchuki­n Research Institute, said the reading was the same in March 2020 and 2013 but the direction was "totally different." "Back in March 2013, negative sentiment was receding on hopes for 'Abenomics' but the situation is far more serious this time."

"There are increasing risks that confidence will sink further now," he told AFP.

The world's third largest economy is "bound to fall" into a recession, Minami said.

"The problem is nobody knows how long these woes will last, hitting business confidence hard."

Japan's government has been "slow" to compile a rescue package, Minami said, adding it must work out a supplement­ary spending plan rapidly with the start of the new fiscal year on Wednesday.

Naoya Oshikubo, senior economist at SuMi Trust said "the postponeme­nt of the Tokyo Olympics can be seen as the emblem of the great sense of uncertaint­y about the future, felt across Japan and the world, which is slowing demand."

But economists expect the gloomy Tankan report is unlikely to push the Bank of Japan into taking new easing measures soon.

Ueno at NLI Research Institute noted the bank had already brought forward its last policy meeting and decided on additional easing measures on March 16.

"It would be a different story if the yen appreciate­s rapidly... but otherwise the bank is expected to maintain a wait-and-see stance for a while, given the little room it has for further easing," Ueno said.

Japan has reported fewer coronaviru­s infections and death than other major economies but authoritie­s have warned the nation is at crossroads to prevent an explosive rise in cases.

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