Year: 2025

  • Japan preliminary December PMI shows modest growth as services offset factory weakness

    Japan’s private sector ended 2025 on a firmer footing, with business activity continuing to expand despite softer momentum and persistent weakness in manufacturing, according to the latest flash PMI data from S&P Global.

    The headline Flash Japan Composite PMI Output Index eased to 51.5 in December from 52.0 in November, remaining above the 50 threshold that separates expansion from contraction for a ninth consecutive month. While the pace of growth slowed from a three-month high, the reading still pointed to a modest expansion in overall activity at a rate stronger than the post-pandemic average.

    At the sector level, services remained the primary driver of growth.

    • The Services PMI Business Activity Index slipped to 52.5 from 53.2, signalling continued but slower expansion.
    • Manufacturing conditions remained under pressure, though signs of stabilisation emerged. The Manufacturing PMI rose to 49.7 from 48.7, indicating contraction persisted but eased to its mildest pace in around 18 months.

    New business returned to growth at the composite level following two months of decline, marking the strongest increase since August. Services demand improved modestly, while the downturn in manufacturing sales softened significantly, suggesting goods demand may be approaching a turning point. In contrast, new export orders declined again, reflecting continued weakness in overseas demand for manufactured goods, partially offset by marginal improvements in services exports.

    Improving domestic demand conditions supported a stronger increase in employment. Overall staffing levels rose at the fastest pace since May 2024, with job creation accelerating across both manufacturing and services. Despite higher headcounts, outstanding business increased at the fastest rate in two-and-a-half years, driven largely by rising backlogs in the services sector, highlighting capacity constraints.

    Business confidence remained positive but softened into year-end. Firms continued to expect output growth in 2026, though optimism fell from November, particularly among manufacturers. Survey respondents cited global economic uncertainty, demographic challenges and rising costs as key risks to the outlook.

    Cost pressures intensified further, with input price inflation reaching its highest level in eight months across both sectors. Companies responded by lifting selling prices at solid rates, underscoring persistent inflationary pressures in Japan’s private sector.

    The PMI data reinforce the Bank of Japan’s cautious but increasingly hawkish policy bias. Services-led growth, accelerating employment and intensifying cost pressures support the case that underlying inflation dynamics remain firm enough to justify gradual policy normalisation. However, the continued contraction in manufacturing, weak export demand and softer business confidence argue against an aggressive tightening path. For the BOJ, the survey aligns with a strategy of incremental adjustment rather than abrupt moves, reinforcing expectations that any further policy steps will be carefully calibrated and data-dependent.

    The BoJ meet on Thursday and Friday this week (18 and 19 December), a 25bp interest rate rise is widely expected.

    For the yen, the PMI report offers a mixed signal. Rising domestic price pressures and stronger job growth are marginally supportive for JPY via the policy channel, but ongoing manufacturing weakness and subdued external demand limit upside. As a result, yen performance is likely to remain dominated by global rate differentials, particularly U.S. yields, rather than domestic activity data alone. Absent a clear shift in BOJ communication, PMI trends are unlikely to trigger a sustained JPY move, leaving the currency sensitive to swings in global risk sentiment and U.S. monetary policy expectations.

    This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.

  • PBOC is expected to set the USD/CNY reference rate at 7.0444 – Reuters estimate

    The People’s Bank of China is due to set the daily USD/CNY reference rate at around 0115 GMT (2115 US Eastern time), a fixing that remains one of the most closely watched signals in Asian foreign exchange markets.

    China operates a managed floating exchange rate system, under which the renminbi (yuan) is allowed to trade within a prescribed band around a central reference rate, or midpoint, set each trading day by the PBOC. The current trading band permits the currency to move plus or minus 2% from the official midpoint during onshore trading hours.

    Each morning, the PBOC determines the midpoint based on a range of inputs. These include the previous day’s closing price, movements in major currencies, particularly the US dollar, broader international FX conditions, and domestic economic considerations such as capital flows, growth momentum and financial stability objectives. The midpoint is not a purely mechanical calculation, allowing policymakers discretion to guide market expectations.

    Once the midpoint is announced, onshore USD/CNY is free to trade within the allowable band. If market pressures push the yuan toward either edge of that range, the central bank may step in to smooth volatility. Intervention can take the form of direct buying or selling of yuan, adjustments to liquidity conditions, or guidance through state-owned banks.

    As a result, the daily fixing is often interpreted as a policy signal rather than just a technical reference point. A stronger-than-expected CNY midpoint is typically read as a sign the PBOC is leaning against depreciation pressure, while a weaker fixing for the CNY can indicate tolerance for a softer currency, often in response to dollar strength or domestic economic headwinds.

    In periods of heightened global volatility, such as shifts in US rate expectations, trade tensions or capital flow pressures, the fixing takes on added significance. For investors, it provides insight into Beijing’s currency priorities, balancing competitiveness, capital stability and financial market confidence.

    This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.

  • New Zealand bonds – NZDMO cuts near-term bond issuance but lifts medium-term outlook

    New Zealand’s Debt Management Office (NZDMO) has trimmed its near-term bond issuance plans, offering modest relief to the government bond market even as borrowing needs remain elevated over the medium term.

    In an update released Tuesday, the NZDMO said it will issue NZ$35 billion of government bonds in the 2025/26 fiscal year, down NZ$3 billion from the NZ$38 billion projected in the May Budget. The reduction reflects improved cash flows and a reassessment of near-term funding requirements, easing immediate supply pressures in the domestic bond market.

    The adjustment is likely to be viewed positively by investors, particularly following a period of heavy issuance that has weighed on demand and contributed to elevated yields across the curve. A smaller funding task in the coming fiscal year reduces rollover risk and may help stabilise longer-dated government bond yields, especially if demand from offshore investors remains supportive.

    However, the NZDMO also lifted its four-year gross bond issuance forecast through June 2029 to NZ$135 billion, up from NZ$132 billion previously outlined. The upward revision underscores that while near-term borrowing needs have eased, the government’s longer-term funding requirements remain substantial, reflecting ongoing fiscal pressures, infrastructure spending and higher debt-servicing costs.

    From a policy perspective, the updated issuance profile arrives at a sensitive juncture for financial markets, with investors closely assessing the interaction between fiscal settings and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s monetary policy outlook. Reduced bond supply in 2025/26 could marginally ease financial conditions, complementing any future easing bias from the RBNZ should inflation continue to moderate.

    Nevertheless, the higher medium-term issuance outlook suggests supply will remain a structural feature of the New Zealand government bond market. Investors are likely to remain selective, focusing on yield compensation and curve dynamics as fiscal consolidation progresses only gradually.

    Overall, the NZDMO’s update signals short-term relief for bond supply, but reinforces the reality of sustained borrowing needs in the years ahead.

    This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.

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