Japan’s trade data for November delivered a positive surprise, with exports rising 6.1% yoy to JPY 9.72 trillion, beating expectations of 4.8% yoy, and marking the third consecutive month of growth. The strength helped Japan record a JPY 322.2 billion trade surplus, the first in five months.
Exports to the US were a key driver, climbing 8.8% yoy. Auto shipments to the US rose 1.5%, marking the first increase since March and suggesting the drag from higher US tariffs is beginning to ease.
By contrast, exports to mainland China fell -2.4% yoy, weighed down by a sharp -5.9% decline in foodstuff shipments. That weakness came against a backdrop of renewed political tension, after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi warned that a Chinese attempt to seize Taiwan could prompt Japanese military intervention, followed by Beijing restricting imports of Japanese seafood. Offsetting some of that drag, exports to Hong Kong surged 11.4%.
On the import side, growth was more subdued. Imports rose just 1.3% yoy to JPY 9.39 trillion, undershooting expectations of 2.5%.












