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Japan's machinery orders plunge | Japan's machinery orders plunge |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Japanese machinery orders, seen as a barometer of corporate spending activity, posted their steepest monthly fall on record in November. | Japanese machinery orders, seen as a barometer of corporate spending activity, posted their steepest monthly fall on record in November. |
Core private sector machinery orders, excluding orders from electric power firms and shipbuilders, fell 16% from October to 754bn yen ($8.4bn; £5.8bn). | Core private sector machinery orders, excluding orders from electric power firms and shipbuilders, fell 16% from October to 754bn yen ($8.4bn; £5.8bn). |
It is the fastest rate of decline since the government survey started in 1987. | It is the fastest rate of decline since the government survey started in 1987. |
The news sent the Nikkei stock market index down 5%. Many other major Asian markets also fell steeply. | |
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index fell 3.4%, South Korea's Kospi dropped 6%, and markets in Australia, India and Taiwan fell 4% or more. Singapore's main index fell more than 2.5%. | |
The new Japanese data comes after recent figures showed industrial output in the country dropped 8% in November compared to October, the biggest fall on record. | |
'Worse than predicted' | 'Worse than predicted' |
The latest figures show businesses are cutting investment in the hope of getting through the country's current recession. | The latest figures show businesses are cutting investment in the hope of getting through the country's current recession. |
The large decline in machinery orders far outstrips October's 4.4% decline. | The large decline in machinery orders far outstrips October's 4.4% decline. |
After the figures were released the benchmark Nikkei 225 share index fell by nearly 5%. | After the figures were released the benchmark Nikkei 225 share index fell by nearly 5%. |
"Machinery orders were much worse than predicted and this has thrown a shadow over domestic investor confidence. There's a lot of fear about earnings," said Noritsugu Hirakawa, a strategist at Okasan Securities. | "Machinery orders were much worse than predicted and this has thrown a shadow over domestic investor confidence. There's a lot of fear about earnings," said Noritsugu Hirakawa, a strategist at Okasan Securities. |
Japan's manufacturing exporters have been hit by a fall in demand from overseas, as well as a stronger yen. | Japan's manufacturing exporters have been hit by a fall in demand from overseas, as well as a stronger yen. |
Among these are Sony and Toyota, which have both cut production and jobs, and are expected to report weak sales and profits figures for 2008. | |
Job cuts | |
Two further Japanese firms added to the air of corporate malaise on Thursday. | |
Carmaker Nissan said it was cutting domestic production by 64,000 vehicles in February and March to adjust to a reduced global demand. | |
And Sanyo Electric said it would cut 1,200 jobs in Japan and overseas as it looks to steer its struggling semiconductor operation through the downturn. | |
"In our semiconductor and related businesses we will cut 800 domestic positions and 400 positions overseas - in total 1,200 - including regular and temporary workers," said Sanyo vice-president Koichi Maeda. |
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