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Business confidence at large manufacturers in Japan rose to 15.0 in the fourth quarter (Q4) of 2025 from 14.0 in Q3, according to the Bank of Japan’s quarterly Tankan survey on Tuesday. This reading came in line with the market consensus.
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Japan Tankan Non – Manufacturing Outlook in line with expectations (28) in 4Q
Japan Tankan Non – Manufacturing Outlook in line with expectations (28) in 4Q -
Japan Tankan Large Manufacturing Outlook above expectations (13) in 4Q: Actual (15)
Japan Tankan Large Manufacturing Outlook above expectations (13) in 4Q: Actual (15) -
Bank of Japan Tankan shows large manufacturing index improved from Q3
Japan’s corporate sentiment remained broadly stable in the Bank of Japan’s December Tankan survey, with large manufacturers’ sentiment holding steady and business conditions across the services sector remaining elevated, even as profit expectations weakened and labour shortages persisted.
The headline large manufacturers’ index came in at +15, matching both the previous quarter and market expectations. This is the highest since December 2021.
Sentiment is expected to remain unchanged in March, outperforming consensus forecasts. Large non-manufacturers eased slightly to +34, just below expectations, with a further moderation to +28 projected for March.
Smaller firms showed modest improvement, with small manufacturers rising to +6, beating forecasts, while small non-manufacturers edged up to +15, the highest sonce March 2019. Capital expenditure plans were resilient, with large firms forecasting FY2025/26 capex growth of 12.6%, above expectations, led by manufacturers.
However, profit expectations softened. Large manufacturers see recurring profits falling 7.8% in FY2025/26, weighing on the overall earnings outlook despite solid investment intentions.
Corporate inflation expectations were unchanged, with firms continuing to expect consumer prices to rise 2.4% over one-, three- and five-year horizons. Labour market conditions remained tight, with the employment diffusion index at -38, underscoring persistent worker shortages.
Japanese firms forecast the dollar averaging around ¥147 in FY2025/26, pointing to expectations of continued yen weakness.
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The survey supports the BOJ’s gradual normalisation narrative, with stable sentiment, anchored inflation expectations and strong capex offset by weaker profits and lingering yen sensitivity.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
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Japan Tankan Non – Manufacturing Index below forecasts (35) in 4Q: Actual (34)
Japan Tankan Non – Manufacturing Index below forecasts (35) in 4Q: Actual (34) -
Japan Tankan Large All Industry Capex above expectations (12%) in 4Q: Actual (12.6%)
Japan Tankan Large All Industry Capex above expectations (12%) in 4Q: Actual (12.6%) -
Japan Tankan Large Manufacturing Index meets forecasts (15) in 4Q
Japan Tankan Large Manufacturing Index meets forecasts (15) in 4Q -
Asia-Pacific markets set for lower open ahead of key data from China and Japan
China will release its November retail sales, fixed asset investment and industrial output numbers, while Japan will announce its fourth-quarter Tankan survey. -
China to issue ultra-long-term special government bonds next year — Bloomberg
China’s finance ministry said that the government planned to issue ultra-long-term special government bonds in 2026, with proceeds used to support key national strategies and security initiatives, Bloomberg reported on Saturday. -
Rollover for U.S. Equity Index Futures is Monday, December 15, 2025: What You Need to Know
Futures rollover is the process by which traders exit positions in a soon-to-expire contract and re-establish them in the next active contract month. This is particularly important in U.S. equity index futures:
- including the S&P 500 (ES),
- Nasdaq 100 (NQ),
- Dow Jones (YM)
- and Russell 2000 (RTY)
which trade on fixed expiration schedules.
These contracts expire on a quarterly cycle, with final trading taking place on the third Friday of March, June, September and December.
In practice, rollover activity typically begins earlier, with many traders shifting positions from the Monday of expiration week as liquidity migrates to the next contract. Some participants instead monitor volume and open interest to identify the point at which trading activity decisively moves into the new contract.
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I got a head start notification at an early hour here this morning!
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
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