FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

Japan's Core Inflation Cools to 1.4% in April

By

Japan's core consumer prices eased in April, registering a year-on-year increase of 1.4%, compared with 1.8% in March, according to government data on Friday.

The print, which excludes perishable items, is still well below the Bank of Japan's inflation target of 2% and market consensus of 1.8%.

Excluding fresh food and energy, the reading was at 1.9% in April, down from 2.4% the month prior.

Including all items, headline CPI rose 1.4% in April, a tad lower than the 1.5% increase in March.

The slower pace of increase over the past year is attributed to moderating effects on energy costs as the government intervenes to ease the cost of living.

Although the increase in fresh food prices accelerated to 0.3% from a contraction of 4.8% month prior.

Related Articles

International

New Zealand Credit Card Spending, Balances Fall in April

Credit card spending in New Zealand decreased by 0.3% month on month to NZ$4.28 billion in April after a 0.7% increase in the previous month, while credit card balances fell 1.1% to NZ$5.96 billion in April, data from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand showed Thursday.Domestic billings on New Zealand-issued cards fell by 1.2% to NZ$3.68 billion in April, following a 0.8% increase in the previous month. Billings on overseas-issued cards fell to NZ$598 million from NZ$726 million.Compared with the year-earlier period, credit card spending rose 2.9% in April after a 0.4% increase a year ago.

$^NZ50
International

China's Postal Sector Logs 6% Rise in January-April Revenue

China's postal sector logged total business revenue of 601.9 billion yuan in the first four months of 2026, up 5.8% from the previous year, according to data from the State Post Bureau.Parcels handled rose 4.1% year over year to 70.2 billion, with express deliveries accounting for 64.6 billion parcels, up 5.1%. percent.

$^SSEC$^SZSE
International

Australia's Private Sector Contracts in May Amid Inflation, Global Uncertainty

Australia's private sector slipped back into contraction in May as output, demand, and business sentiment weakened amid persistent inflation pressures and geopolitical disruption, according to a survey by S&P Global released Thursday.The Flash Australia PMI Composite Output Index fell to 47.8 in May from 50.4 in April, signaling a moderate contraction in activity, the report said.A reading below the 50-point threshold indicates contraction.The Flash Services PMI Business Activity Index fell to 47.7 in May from 50.7 in April. The Flash Manufacturing Output Index remained at 48.5, while the Flash Manufacturing PMI decreased to 50.2 from 51.3.The downturn was broad-based, with services contracting again in May at a slower pace than in March and manufacturing falling for a fourth straight month, leaving both below long-term growth trends, per the report.New business fell further in May, recording the steepest decline since September 2021, with both sectors seeing strong drops in orders, largely due to weaker market conditions amid increased uncertainty from the Middle East conflict.Business sentiment in the Australian private sector declined again in May, hitting its joint-lowest level in over a decade amid concerns over rising costs, potential interest rate increases, and challenging market conditions.Inflation pressures stayed elevated as rising fuel, raw material, and transport costs kept input price inflation high, which was the second strongest since August 2022, while output prices rose but remained below cost inflation.Australia saw a marginal fall in private sector employment mid-second quarter for the first time in nearly 18 months, with job losses at a five-and-a-half-year high and both services and manufacturing contracting.The Middle East conflict disrupted manufacturing supply chains, causing vessel delays, material shortages, and higher fuel costs, leading to the second-largest drop in supplier performance in nearly four years.

$^AXJO