Japan's first-quarter growth was revised lower on weaker capital spending, yet the data does not alter expectations for a Bank of Japan rate increase in the coming months.
Japan's economy expanded at an annualized 1.8% in the January-March period, below the preliminary 2.1% estimate, as softer-than-expected capital expenditure weighed on the recovery — but the revision keeps the Bank of Japan's tightening trajectory intact, according to revised government data released Monday.
"The downward revision was due largely to softer-than-expected capital expenditure," the Cabinet Office said in its release. The data showed real GDP remained on a recovery track despite the miss, with private consumption and exports providing offsetting support.
The revision brings first-quarter growth below the 2.0% consensus that markets had priced after the preliminary reading, though the economy still expanded for a third consecutive quarter. The Nikkei 225 fell 3.92% to 63,975.89 in Monday trading, extending losses from last week as investors weighed the growth revision against the BOJ's tightening signals. The yen held near recent levels, with traders focused on the central bank's next policy decision rather than the GDP adjustment.
The data is the final GDP print before the BOJ's June 18-19 policy meeting, where markets increasingly expect a rate increase. A BOJ policymaker recently signaled that a rate hike might be approaching, and the revised GDP data — while softer — does not contradict that view. If the BOJ delivers a hike, it would mark the central bank's first move since January and would test whether Japan's recovery can withstand tighter monetary conditions.
The capex weakness that drove the revision is the key variable for the BOJ's outlook. Capital expenditure grew at a slower pace than initially reported, suggesting that business investment — a critical component of the central bank's virtuous cycle narrative — has not yet gained the momentum policymakers hoped for. Still, the broader economy remains on an expansion path, with household spending and export demand providing ballast.
For global markets, the stakes extend beyond Japan. A BOJ rate hike would narrow the interest rate differential between Japan and the rest of the developed world, potentially triggering an unwind of yen-funded carry trades that have supported risk assets from emerging-market bonds to cryptocurrencies. The yen has already strengthened 4% against the dollar over the past month as markets priced in a higher probability of BOJ action.
The GDP revision comes during a week dominated by inflation data and central bank decisions globally. The US May CPI release on Wednesday and the ECB's expected rate hike on Thursday will set the broader macro tone, but Japan's growth trajectory — and the BOJ's response to it — remains a distinct variable in the cross-asset equation. The last time Japan's GDP was revised lower in a tightening cycle was in the first quarter of 2024, when the economy contracted by an annualized 2.9% — a far steeper decline that nonetheless did not prevent the BOJ from ending negative rates in March of that year.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.