China+ Publications
Below is a list of our China+ Publications for the last 5 months. If you are looking for reports older than 5 months please email info@pantheonmacro.com, or contact your account rep
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Daily Monitor Datanotes Duncan Wrigley 
Tokyo headline inflation slows, despite rising food inflation
 
Japan's weak manufacturing PMI should rise after US-Japan trade deal
Services activity rose
 
- Deputy Governor Uchida said on Wednesday that the US-Japan tariff deal reduces uncertainty...
 
- ...hinting that the BoJ will revise up its growth and inflation outlook next week.
 
- The July composite flash PMI was steady, though services and manufacturing activity diverged.
 
 
- We are raising our growth and inflation forecasts for Japan, after yesterday’s relatively benign trade deal.
 
- The BoJ is likely to resume rate hikes in October, as it forms an initial view on the 2026 wage outlook.
 
- USDJPY is likely to strengthen moderately; but political risk was evident in the 40-year JGB auction yesterday.
 
 
Japan's headline consumer inflation slows after energy subsidies restart
upper house election poses JGB risks
 
- .China’s Q2 real GDP growth weathered the tariff war, as exports to non-US markets picked up…
 
- …But nominal GDP growth was the lowest since Q4 2022, as deflation steepened.
 
- Consumption is likely to remain sluggish, with wage growth slowing in Q2.
 
 
China's steadyish Q2 real GDP growth boosted by intensifying deflation; nominal growth lowest since Q4 2022
 
- China’s broad credit growth rose in June, but mainly thanks to government-bond issuance. 
 
- The rise in corporate borrowing is distorted by the local-government debt swap; it’s likely still sluggish. 
 
- M1 jump is hopeful but may prove a blip given the lack of supporting data elsewhere pointing to an upturn. 
 
 
China's worsening producer deflation mainly due to bad weather
Low core consumer inflation reflects weak demand
 
- China’s producer deflation is entrenched, but the worsening in June was due to temporary factors.
 
- Auto prices rose, after firms pledged faster supplier payments; other sectors are making supply policies.
 
- Weak core consumer inflation is indicative of poor demand; all eyes on the end-month Politburo meeting.
 
 
- Japan’s wages took a big knock from a bonus plunge in May, as exporters’ profits were hurt by the tariff war.
 
- The headline large-manufacturer Tankan was oddly steady in Q2, despite the tariff war.
 
- Consumption still looks soft, despite one-off factors boosting May’s household spending data.
 
 
China's Caixin PMI, Korea's PMI and Japan's Tankan point to manufacturers' measured relief at easing trade tensions
 
- The Caixin PMI rebounded more strongly than the official manufacturing index in June…
 
- …Deflation pressures are festering, however, likely forcing regulatory curbs on excessive competition.
 
- Korea’s manufacturing PMI is starting to rise from its sickbed, now the election has reduced political risk.
 
 
- The PBoC on Friday hinted it saw less need for a near- term monetary policy boost than three months ago.
 
- The June official manufacturing PMI improved, thanks to policy support and an easing in tariff tensions.
 
- The construction PMI ticked up at last, but it’s too soon to celebrate; the hard data pointed to slowing.
 
 
China's Official PMIs point to improving manufacturing and construction activity, but weak jobs market
 
Tokyo inflation cools thanks to energy subsidies restart
China's industrial profits hit by slower investment income and weak demand
 
- Japan’s June headline flash manufacturing index was lifted by output, but demand remained subdued.
 
- Cost pressures are easing only slowly, with global oil prices a key risk.
 
- The service sector continues to be bolstered by tourism, notably surging Chinese visitor numbers.
 
 
Japanese exports fall as US tariff hikes slam auto shipments
 
Japanese exports fall as US tariff hikes slam auto shipments
 
- Japan’s exports fell in May for the first time since September, hit by US tariff hikes.
 
- Still, exports held up better than the market expected, as exporters cut prices and shipments to the EU rose.
 
- The bond market faces risks from July’s upper house election, despite the BoJ’s supportive policy tweak.