Japan October retail sales boosted by fuel-price spike, broad trend still soft
TOKYO : Japan's retail sales rose for the first time in
three months in October, though less than expected, and the underlying private
consumption trend pointed to persistent strains on a fragile economic recovery
despite an easing of COVID-19 curbs.
Following a larger-than-expected contraction in
July-September, analysts expect the world's third-largest economy to rebound
this quarter thanks to an upturn in household spending, while supply-side
concerns still loom for export-reliant businesses.
"However, as people are still wary of another virus
wave, they're not going out and spending actively," said Masato Koike,
senior economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute, adding that stagnant wage
growth is an additional headwind to fostering solid consumption growth.
Retail sales rose 0.9per cent in October from a year
earlier, government data showed on Monday, versus the median market forecast
for a 1.1per cent increase. It followed an upwardly revised 0.5per cent drop in
September.
A 25.9per cent surge in fuel sales due to rising petroleum
product prices boosted the headline retail figure, while sales of goods other
than fuel fell 1.2per cent year-on-year. Worryingly, car sales were down
19.5per cent from a year earlier, the biggest monthly drop since January 2011,
dragged down by supply constraints, according to a government official.
Compared with the previous month, retail sales grew 1.1per
cent on a seasonally adjusted basis in October, following an upwardly revised
2.8per cent gain in September.
Japan has eased coronavirus restrictions on restaurant
hours, large-scale events and border controls as infections have fallen
dramatically and more than three-fourths of its population is fully vaccinated.
Private-sector statistics, however, had shown the comeback
of consumer spending was gradual in October, and analysts said a full recovery
in sectors hit hard by the pandemic such as face-to-face services will take
longer time.
"Indeed, there are signs that consumers are finally
shedding their caution as mobility only started to surpass its 2020 level in
November," said Marcel Thieliant, senior Japan economist at Capital
Economics. "Spending on services should finally start to recover in
earnest now."
To boost Japan's lukewarm economic recovery, the government
earlier this month announced a record US$490 billion stimulus package,
including cash payouts to households with children and subsidies to COVID-hit
businesses.
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