Business News and Articles
StockNewsLine.com



About Us  Contact  Advertise
Archive  RSS
 
Today - 30.07.2010
S M T W Th F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
Mailing List

Regions


Japan's core machinery orders plunge in August (AP)

2008.10.09

By TOMOKO A. HOSAKA 33 minutes ago

TOKYO - A key barometer of corporate capital spending in Japan plunged in August to its lowest level in more than five years, the government said Thursday, as business investment retreated sharply amid fears of a broader global slowdown.

Core private sector machinery orders, which exclude often-volatile orders from electric power firms and shipbuilders, fell 14.5 percent from the previous month to 891.7 billion yen ($8.9 billion) — the lowest value since April 2003.

The result marked the third straight month of declines and was far worse than the 3.3 percent drop forecast by Kyodo news agency.

The figures, considered an important gauge of business investment in the future, are likely to exacerbate concerns that sluggish exports are edging the world's second-largest economy closer toward recession.

A report released Wednesday by the International Monetary Fund issued a dire prognosis, slashing growth projections for the global economy and predicting that the United States — a key export market for Japan — would continue to lose traction.

"The world economy is now entering a major downturn in the face of the most dangerous shock in mature financial markets since the 1930s," the IMF said in its latest World Economic Outlook.

Compared with a year earlier and without seasonal adjustments, core orders fell 13.0 percent in August.

Orders from manufacturers slid 13.9 percent, while those from non-manufacturers declined 14.9 percent. Total orders, including those from electric power firms and ships, were down 1.2 percent.

Overseas orders rebounded in August, jumping 14.8 percent after two months of falls.

Regions : Americas

More articles on this topic:

Consumer sentiment dips going into holidays (Reuters)
Reuters - U.S. consumer sentiment slipped in December but was not far from the year's highs, a report said on Friday, suggesting Americans were guardedly optimistic about the economy in the holiday season.
November housing starts up (Reuters)
Reuters - The pace of U.S. home building rose in November as new home starts climbed 6.7 percent, rebounding from a sharp decline in October while building permits fell 3 percent, a government report showed on Tuesday.
US GDP revised down to show 2.0 percent growth pace (AFP)
AFP - US economic growth has been a bit more sluggish than earlier estimated in the third quarter, growing at a 2.0 percent annualized pace, according to revised data.
Consumers boost buying during holidays (AP)
AP - Keeping the nation's cash registers ringing, consumers boosted their spending in November by the largest amount in four months, raising hopes shoppers will act more like Santas than Scrooges during the holidays.
Consumer confidence ebbs, boosts rate hopes (Reuters)
Reuters - U.S. consumer confidence ebbed in December, while a key measure of inflation held steady in November for first time in four years, boosting the chances of Federal Reserve interest rate cuts in 2007.
 
Home

Site Map

Contact Us

Traveling Wilburys CD