Japanese exports fell by more than 20 percent for a third straight month even as key markets started to reopen from virus shutdowns.
The value of Japan’s overall shipments overseas slid 26.2 percent in June from a year earlier, led by steep declines in exports of cars and auto parts, the finance ministry reported Monday. Economists forecast a 24.7 percent fall.
Although exports continued to be down sharply compared with the previous year, there were signs declines may have bottomed. Car exports halved in June compared with falls of around two-thirds in May.
Overall drops in exports to the US and the EU were about 4 to 5 percentage points less than in the prior month.
Key insights
Economist Takeshi Minami at Norinchukin Research Institute said the worst appeared to be over for Japan’s trade slump, but the pace of recovery is likely to be slow, as rising infection rates in the US and elsewhere hamper efforts to reopen. “At best, trade will see a gradual recovery,” he said.
Japan’s reliance on exports for growth makes its overall recovery prospects precarious. The International Monetary Fund last month cut its outlook for Japan and the rest of the world economy, projecting a deeper recession and slower rebound than it saw just two months earlier.
Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, speaking last week, said he expects Japan’s economy to improve gradually in the second half of the year, but the risks are skewed to the downside.
Improving shipments to China have helped prevent Japan’s export declines from being even worse. Shipments to the world’s second-largest economy dropped just 0.2 percent in June, compared with last year.
What Bloomberg’s economist says
“Looking ahead, exports are likely to continue to recover in 3Q —depending on the shape of the recoveries in demand in the US and Europe. Imports should also recover at around the same pace, reflecting reduced restrictions on domestic activity.”
— The Asia Economist Team Bloomberg News