Japan's retail sales fall most in 17 years, keep BoJ pressured

29 Apr, 2015

Japanese retail sales in March declined at their fastest annual pace in 17 years as consumer spending struggled to pick up a year after a sales-tax increase, keeping alive speculation the Bank of Japan will expand stimulus again later this year. Retail sales slid 9.7 percent in March from the same month last year, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry said on Tuesday.
Sales had been expected to drop sharply in comparison with March 2014, when they had surged ahead of the sales-tax hike the following month, but the result was even worse than the median forecast for a 7.3 percent fall in a Reuters poll of economists.
In a sign of the persistent spending blues, month-on-month sales in March declined 1.9 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis.
"It was clearly disappointing," said Masamichi Adachi, senior economist at JP Morgan in Tokyo.
"The March figure suggests we were too optimistic we'd see a pickup in early spring," he said, adding that consumers might be feeling a deterioration in purchasing power amid rising prices.
Markets will be focused on the BoJ's meeting as well as a slew of other data this week - including industrial production, inflation and employment - for clues on the economy's performance in the final month of the first quarter.
The central bank is expected to hold off on expanding stimulus at Thursday's policy review, but remains under pressure to do more to get the economy motoring again after last year's April sales tax hike clobbered consumption.
Signs of continued weakness in private consumption - which accounts for some 60 percent of gross domestic product - is a headache for the BoJ as the economic recovery remains fragile following a recession last year.
The year-on-year fall in March retail sales was the biggest since March 1998, when they also slid a year after a similar tax increase. The value of March retail was weighed down by a 20 percent year-on-year drop in fuel sales as oil prices weakened.
But sales of motor vehicles, personal computers and household appliances like refrigerators and washing machines also extended multimonth declines, unable to regain traction after consumers stocked up on durable goods before the tax rise. Sales at large-scale retailers - department stores and supermarkets - plunged 12.3 percent from a year earlier.

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