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Japan’s exports rise for first time in five months, but U.S. demand still weak

Japan’s exports rose in September for the first time in five months, signaling tentative recovery in external demand even as shipments to the U.S. continued to contract sharply.

Exports climbed 4.2% yoy to JPY 9.41T, slightly below expectations of 4.6%. The rebound was driven largely by strength in Asia, where exports jumped 9.2%, including a 5.8% rise to China. In contrast, shipments to the U.S. fell -13.3%, with auto exports down -24.2%, extending months of weakness despite being a smaller drop than August’s 28.4% decline.

Imports also grew faster than expected, rising 3.3% yoy to JPY 9.65T, compared with forecasts of 0.6%. As a result, Japan posted a trade deficit of JPY 234.6B.

The data come just weeks after Washington finalized a new trade agreement with Tokyo, implementing a 15% baseline tariff on nearly all Japanese imports, down from the initial 27.5% rate.

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