Table of Contents
Affiliate Disclosure
Affiliate Disclosure DailyForex.com adheres to strict guidelines to preserve editorial integrity to help you make decisions with confidence. Some of the reviews and content we feature on this site are supported by affiliate partnerships from which this website may receive money. This may impact how, where and which companies / services we review and write about. Our team of experts work to continually re-evaluate the reviews and information we provide on all the top Forex / CFD brokerages featured here. Our research focuses heavily on the broker’s custody of client deposits and the breadth of its client offering. Safety is evaluated by quality and length of the broker's track record, plus the scope of regulatory standing. Major factors in determining the quality of a broker’s offer include the cost of trading, the range of instruments available to trade, and general ease of use regarding execution and market information.

More Misery For Japan

By: Dr. Mike Campbell

The deal thrashed out between the leaders of the EU and the banking sector on Wednesday is still sending shock-waves of euphoria through global markets and is boosting banking shares around the world. Time will tell if the EU leaders can deliver on the deal and if it will draw a line (for now) under the European sovereign debt crisis, but it is not the only cloud in the economic heavens.

Japan has had a very difficult time this year. The country fell back into recession at the end of Q1 and then suffered a devastating earthquake an tsunami which claimed more than 20000 lives and destroyed billions of dollars worth of infrastructure. Reconstruction and clean-up from the tsunami is a slow business and the economic stimulus to national growth that was expected to result has yet to be seen.

Japan is a country that lives or dies by its exports with the rest of the world. Rightly or wrongly, the Yen has been seen as a safe haven currency since the onset of the global financial crisis. This has pushed the Yen to record highs against the US Dollar and forced up the prices of Japanese products in importing markets. The manufacturers are left with a dilemma: pass on the currency appreciation costs to the consumer and price themselves out of the market; or absorb part of the costs in the shape of reduced profit margins.

Fresh data emerging from Japan reveals that both household expenditure and factory output fell in September. Factory output for the month was down by 4% on the August figure whilst household expenditure declined 1.9% year-on-year in September. Japanese manufacturing output has also been affected by flooding at overseas production facilities in Thailand which led to all nine overseas car production facilities in the country stopping production.

And if all that wasn’t enough, Japan has debts of $8.6 trillion which will need to be addressed sooner or later. If global confidence in Japan’s ability to service its debts is dented, Japan could be standing over an abyss.

Dr. Mike Campbell
About Dr. Mike Campbell
Dr. Mike Campbell is a British scientist and freelance writer. Mike got his doctorate in Ghent, Belgium and has worked in Belgium, France, Monaco and Austria since leaving the UK. As a writer, he specialises in business, science, medicine and environmental subjects.
 

Most Visited Forex Broker Reviews