Money Talks: Japan Companies Cut Spending by Record; Profits Slump


June 4, 2009 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese companies cut spending at the fastest pace 
in 54 years as a slump in global demand eroded profits, leaving less money for 
plant and equipment. 

Capital spending excluding software fell 25.4 percent in the three months ended 
March 31 from a year earlier, the largest drop since the government began the 
survey in 1955, the Ministry of Finance said today in Tokyo. Profits tumbled a 
record 69 percent. 

Manufacturers from Panasonic Corp. to Konica Minolta Holdings Inc. have cut 
jobs and are closing factories or scaling back spending plans amid an 
unprecedented decline in exports. Still, production and shipments abroad have 
picked up since last quarter, and companies will gradually start to increase 
spending later this year, said economist Kyohei Morita. 

“Capital investment will probably return to growth from the third quarter, 
albeit slowly,” said Morita, chief Japan economist at Barclays Capital in 
Tokyo. “The main driver will be exports, especially to China.” 

The yield on Japan’s 10-year bond fell 2.5 basis points to 1.52 percent at 1:20 
p.m. in Tokyo. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average lost 0.5 percent, paring this 
year’s gains to 9 percent. 

The government will use today’s report to revise gross domestic product on June 
11. Preliminary figures showed the world’s second-largest economy shrank at a 
record 15.2 percent annual pace last quarter, and analysts predicted little 
change to that figure. 

Revised GDP 

Morita said GDP probably fell 14.5 percent, still the worst-ever contraction. 
Junko Nishioka, an economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in Tokyo, 
predicted 15 percent, and Hiroshi Shiraishi of BNP Paribas SA said a “major” 
revision was unlikely. 

Last quarter probably represented the worst of Japan’s deepest postwar 
recession. Finance Minister Kaoru Yosano said yesterday that the economy will 
probably resume growing this quarter, echoing a prediction made by Bank of 
Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa last month. 

Industrial production climbed at the fastest pace in 56 years in April from 
March as companies made more cars and electronics to replenish stockpiles they 
ran down during the worst of the export slump. Exports rose for a second month. 

Even after the increases, output and exports remain down by more than 30 
percent from a year earlier, and the recession is spreading to consumers as 
companies cut jobs and paychecks. The unemployment rate climbed to a five-year 
high in April, when wages fell for an 11th month


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