Image Source: Pixabay
China’s loan prime rates, Taiwan’s export orders and unemployment orders, Japan’s headline inflation data, and Indonesia’s BI rate will be in focus throughout a quieter week across Asia.
China: No changes for loan prime rates in a quiet week aheadIt’s a quiet week ahead for China. The loan prime rates will be announced on Wednesday, where no change is expected after the People’s Bank of China has so far held rates unchanged this month. There are no major data releases expected in the next week.
Taiwan: Export orders and unemployment rateTaiwan publishes its export orders data on Wednesday afternoon, where we are expecting export orders to moderate slightly to around 2% growth. Taiwan also publishes its unemployment rate on Friday, which is expected to remain stable at around 3.4%.
Japan: Headline inflation data and PMIsJapan’s data should show that activity is gradually returning to normal, recovering from several one-off production disruptions. Reflecting this, PMIs should improve. The manufacturing PMI is expected to remain below the neutral level, while the services PMI should rebound, supported by temporary tax cuts and higher income growth.Exports are expected to rebound by 1.7% yoy after falling by -1.7% in September, while imports are expected to decline by -4.5% amid falling global commodity prices. Meanwhile, we expect headline inflation to ease to 2.3% year-on-year in October, but mainly due to last year’s high base. Monthly growth should pick up to 0.6%, combined with the end of the energy subsidy programme and solid increases in services prices.
Indonesia: BI rate to keep unchangedWe see a higher probability of Bank Indonesia keeping rates unchanged. While we do see room for rate cuts, they are likely to be delayed given the recent weakness in Asian currencies and current domestic policy focus on IDR stability.
Key events in Asia next weekSource: Refinitiv, INGMore By This Author:Polish Inflation Rises As Energy Price Freeze Extended Into 2025
FX Daily: Powell Keeps Market Cautious On The Fed
The Commodities Feed: European Gas Surges On Latest Supply Risk