Japanese manufacturing PMI comes back below 50

7:01 AM 23 May 2019

Summary:

  • Japanese PMI for manufacturing slipped below a 50-point mark due to contracting new export orders
  • PM May is reportedly close to submit her resignation
  • Asian shares down, slight risk-off seen in the FX market

Worrisome signal from Japan

Start investing today or test a free demo

Open real account TRY DEMO Download mobile app Download mobile app

Japanese manufacturing PMI came back below a 50-point mark in May after a recovery to 50.2 in the previous month as renewed trade tensions between the US and China weighed on managers’ sentiment. According to the Markit’s release, new export orders were among the largest culprits of a disappointment we were offered overnight. Namely, the subindex dipped to 47.1 from a final reading of 47.8 in May, mainly reflecting what we have seen in recent days on the trade war front. Keep in mind that a trade surplus Japan holds with the US is significant, so the latter has been pushing Japan to take some steps to reduce it. In turn, among key goods being exported to the US by Japan are cars, hence here is a threat that the Trump administration may decide to slap tariffs on these cars and thereby harming Japanese producers. Let us also remind that Wasington has chosen to hold off on rising duties on European cars and auto parts signalling a 90-day relief period. It is also worth mentioning that for the first time since November 2012 Japanese companies’ expectations for future output showed contraction. This is a not good omen before a slew of PMI readings from European economies as well as China. Let us recall that China saw its manufacturing PMI surging in March, but it then turned out to be a short-lived bounce spurred predominantly by VAT tax cuts, increased infrastructure spending and other steps undertaken by Beijing to revive economic growth.

May’s future hangs by a thread

We already wrote yesterday that a vote on the new withdrawal agreement might not take place as it was tiny odds to be backed by MPs in the UK Parliament. Meanwhile, we were offered some headline from Reuters yesterday evening suggesting that “PM Theresa May is considering pulling the withdrawal agreement bill”. What may happen next if no vote takes place at the beginning of June? It appears that her resignation is the most likely scenario right now. In this regard, one needs to refer to a UK Times article saying explicitly that Theresa May will resign on Friday. Along with her resignation the probability to have Boris Johnson at the helm of the UK government will increase rapidly. In turn, it would then mean the higher likelihood for a hard version of Brexit (without agreement) and here is exactly why the pound is losing steam again. In the morning the British currency is trading 0.2% down against the US dollar being close to this year’s lows. The EURGBP chart looks also impressively as the pair has gained almost 4% in less than three weeks.

The EURGBP has faced the first obstacle in the form of the orange trend line. Keep in mind that the European Parliament elections may affect the cross. Source: xStation5

In the other news:

  • Asian equity markets have been largely down with the Hang Seng falling 1.8% at the time of writing; DAX and SP500 future also point to a red opening

  • US dollar trades subtly higher following the minutes release, JPY and CHF resist the US modest strength

  • Australian CBA/Markit PMI (May) for manufacturing rose to 51.1 from 50.9, for services increased to 52.3 from 50.1

  • New Zealand’s finance minister said the country would shift its net debt target range to give the government more flexibility, a new target is to be set at 15-25% of GDP from the 2021/2022 fiscal year

Share:
Back
Xtb logo

Join over 1 000 000 XTB Group Clients from around the world

The financial instruments we offer, especially CFDs, can be highly risky. Fractional Shares (FS) is an acquired from XTB fiduciary right to fractional parts of stocks and ETFs. FS are not a separate financial instrument. The limited corporate rights are associated with FS.
This page was not created for investors residing in Brazil. This brokerage is not authorized by the Comissão de Valores Mobiliários (CVM) or the Brazilian Central Bank (BCB). The content of this page should not be characterized as an investment offer in Brazil or for investors residing in that country.
Losses can exceed deposits

We use cookies

By clicking “Accept All”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyze site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts.

This group contains cookies that are necessary for our websites to work. They take part in functionalities like language preferences, traffic distribution or keeping user session. They cannot be disabled.

Cookie name
Description
SERVERID
userBranchSymbol cc 2 March 2024
test_cookie cc 25 January 2024
adobe_unique_id cc 1 March 2025
__hssc cc 8 September 2022
SESSID cc 2 March 2024
__cf_bm cc 8 September 2022
intercom-id-iojaybix cc 26 November 2024
intercom-session-iojaybix cc 8 March 2024

We use tools that let us analyze the usage of our page. Such data lets us improve the user experience of our web service.

Cookie name
Description
_gid cc 9 September 2022
_gat_UA-98728395-1 cc 8 September 2022
_gat_UA-121192761-1 cc 8 September 2022
_gcl_au cc 30 May 2024
_ga_CBPL72L2EC cc 1 March 2026
_ga cc 1 March 2026
__hstc cc 7 March 2023
__hssrc

This group of cookies is used to show you ads of topics that you are interested in. It also lets us monitor our marketing activities, it helps to measure the performance of our ads.

Cookie name
Description
MUID cc 26 March 2025
_omappvp cc 11 February 2035
_omappvs cc 1 March 2024
_uetsid cc 2 March 2024
_uetvid cc 26 March 2025
_fbp cc 30 May 2024
fr cc 7 December 2022
_ttp cc 26 March 2025
_tt_enable_cookie cc 26 March 2025
_ttp cc 26 March 2025
hubspotutk cc 7 March 2023

Cookies from this group store your preferences you gave while using the site, so that they will already be here when you visit the page after some time.

Cookie name
Description

This page uses cookies. Cookies are files stored in your browser and are used by most websites to help personalise your web experience. For more information see our Privacy Policy You can manage cookies by clicking "Settings". If you agree to our use of cookies, click "Accept all".

Change region and language
Country of residence
Language