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Washington Bureau Chief Denny Gulino had the same title at Market News for 18 years.
Similar experience undergirds our service in Ottawa, London, Brussels and in Asia.
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–ISM’s Miller: Inflationary Pressures from Fuel Prices Expected to Continue Easing but Prices Index Still Elevated
By Max Sato
(MaceNews) – U.S. services sector expansion slowed slightly in June after accelerating in May but remained in growth territory for two years in a row, with easing in energy prices and a pullback in inventories pointing to stabilizing supply chains in the face of U.S. tariffs and the Mideast conflict, industry data released Monday showed.
The purchasing managers index for services compiled by the Institute for Supply Management, which indicates direction of activity, slipped 0.5 percentage point to 54.0 after rising 0.9 point to 54.5 in May, coming in largely in line with the consensus forecast of 54.1. The index has been fluctuating month to month, falling 2.1 points to 54.0 in March after rising 2.3 points to a more than three-year high of 56.1 in February. The index is 0.9 point above its 12-month moving average of 53.1 in June and stayed above the average for the ninth straight month.
“The more than 2-percentage point drops in both the business activity and new orders indexes were partially offset by the 3.3 percentage point increase in the employment Index,” ISM Services Business Survey Committee Chair Steve Miller said in a statement. “All four subindexes of the services PMI are once again in expansion territory and above their 12-month averages.”
Inflationary pressures are still mainly driven by higher costs related to stiff import tariffs imposed by the U.S. government but surveyed firms commented less frequently on fuel prices. The June report also showed the inventories index dropped to its second-lowest level since October 2025 after the outbreak of the Iran war had triggered rush purchases. The imports index dropped into contraction territory for the first time in five months while the backlog orders index reached its second-highest level in nearly four years.
“These readings, taken with respondent commentary, seem to indicate that supply chains are stabilizing amid sustained business activity, giving confidence to businesses that selective, yet modest, increased employment is warranted,” Miller said in the report.
Comments from ISM members indicate that some of the pricing and supply chain issues are industry-specific.
“We continue to experience higher prices due to the Persian Gulf conflict through rising diesel fuel costs and increased input costs for resin-based packaging,” a firm from the accommodation and food services industry told the ISM. “The brunt of the impact will be experienced in the third quarter of 2026, but we are feeling the impact now.”
Bad weather reduced spring crops harvest has pushed up cost increases in feed expense while higher costs for fertilizers and transportation caused by the Mideast conflict have boosted costs above breakeven levels for many farms, a firm from the agriculture sector said.
“The utility industry continues to experience extended lead times, supply-chain constraints, material shortages, and pricing volatility,” a utilities company said.
The World Cup soccer games that are taking place from June 11 to July 19 in the United States, Canada and Mexico helped employment gains in accommodations and food services in June but they account for only 3% of the U.S. GDP and are not a driver behind the employment index increase, Miller told reporters. He expects “temporary” support from the games to continue in July.
Price pressures from fuel prices are expected to ease further after global crude oil prices have slipped to around pre-Iran war levels, Miller said but also cautioned that the prices index at 67.7 in June is still among the highest since the pandemic.
Judging from the comments from surveyed firms, he said, “It doesn’t seem that …. the increase in employment was one of the things that’s driving pricing levels.”
All the four sub-indexes that directly factor into the services PMI were in expansion territory (prior figures in parentheses).
Business activity 55.4 (57.7) -2.3; The index rose 2.5 points to 59.9 in February to hit the highest since 59.9 in May 2024 before slumping 6.0 points in March to 53.9, the lowest since 49.9 in September 2025.
New orders 55.1 (57.3) -2.2; The index rose 2.0 points to 60.6 in March to hit the highest since 61.6 in February 2023 before slipping 7.1 points to 53.5 in April.
Employment 51.2 (47.9) +3.3; Above the neutral level of 50 for the fourth time in the past 12 months. The index slumped 6.6 points to 45.2 in March, falling to the lowest since 43.7 in December 2023, only a month after it rose 1.5 points to 51.8 to reach the highest since 53.9 in February 2025.
Supplier deliveries 54.4 (55.2) -0.8; The index indicated slower performance for the 19th month in a row (above 50 means slower deliveries).
Among other sub-indexes:
Prices 67.7 (71.3) -3.6; Above 60 for 19 months in a row. May’s 71.3 was the highest since 72.6 in August 2022. The index fell 3.6 points to 63.0 in February, the lowest since March 2025 (60.9)
Inventories 51.2 (62.5) -11.3; The index is at a five-month low. It rose 9.4 points to 62.5 in May, matching the record high of 62.5 hit in May 2010.
Tuesday, July 7
0830 JST (2330 GMT/1930 EDT Monday, July 6) The Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications releases May household spending.
Mace News median forecasts: -2.3% y/y (range: -2.6% to +0.3%) vs. Apr -0.5%; +1.9% m/m (range: +1.2% to +2.5%) vs. Apr +1.6%
By Chikafumi Hodo
TOKYO (MaceNews) – Japan’s real average household spending is expected to post a sixth straight year-on-year drop in May, down 2.3%, after a slight 0.5% dip in April, as consumers remain cautious amid elevated costs of living. It is also in payback for a 4.7% jump in May 2025, which was driven mainly by vehicle purchases after the supply of new vehicles had recovered from suspended output at Toyota group factories over safety check scandals. At the time there was also post-pandemic pickup in eating out and strong demand for air conditioners.
The Mideast conflict and the depreciation of the yen have kept import and production costs high, which are expected to have more spillover effects on consumer prices in coming months. The average real wages have crawled above year-earlier levels in recent months as large firms are raising wages to secure qualified employees but those working for smaller firms feel the pace of pay increase is not catching up with inflation.
The expected decrease is likely to be partly offset by solid replacement demand for air conditioners ahead of April 2027 when the government is scheduled to introduce stricter energy saving standards.
On the month, real average expenditures by households with two or more people are forecast to market another month of a strong gain, up 1.9%, after rising 1.6% in April, slumping 1.3% in March and rebounding 1.5% in February.
Many households have been spending less on eating out and offering smaller amounts of gift money at weddings while they have paid higher medical and dental bills in recent months. Inflation is also hurting households. There is also a widespread move to switch to more affordable mobile communications plans.
On the supply side, official data released last week showed that retail sales surged 5.3% rise on the year in May, coming in much stronger than expected and hitting the highest pace since 5.4% in November 2023, as demand for vehicles, particularly used ones, continued to pick up, booming stock prices prompted consumers to shop for luxury goods and hot weather appeared to have boosted sales of air conditioners and fans.
Industry data showed department store sales posted their fifth straight year-on-year increase in May, up 8.3%, accelerating from a 5.2% gain in April, as spending by visitors from overseas marked a double-digit percentage jump (+16.7%) as seen in the previous month (+18.3%). There was one more public holiday and one more Sunday compared to a year earlier, which led to solid sales to domestic customers.
The yen remains stubbornly weak despite rounds of currency market intervention by the Ministry of Finance from late April to early May, which supported the purchasing power of visitors from Hong Kong, Taiwan, Malaysia and Singapore, offsetting a 5% drop in spending by Chinese tourists.
–BOJ Set to Continue Raising Policy Rate but U.S.-Japan Rate Gap Remains Wide, Exerting Downward Pressure on Yen Vs. Dollar
By Max Sato
(MaceNews) – The depreciation of the yen has lingered on expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve will have to raise interest rates by the end of the year to rein in inflation and thus that dollar assets will remain attractive with much higher returns than those on yen-denominated securities.
Bank of Japan policymakers have said they will continue to raise the policy interest rate as part of the gradual process of reducing the effects of the bank’s large monetary stimulus. After conducting their fifth rate hike in the current cycle in June, BOJ officials also noted that underlying consumer inflation is nearing the bank’s 2% price stability target.
The U.S.-Japan interest rate differential remains wide. Last month the Federal Open Market Committee decided to maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 3.5% to 3.75%, which is still well above the BOJ’s target for the overnight interest rate at 1%, which was raised from 0.75%. The bank estimates the rate that is neutral to economic activity is somewhere between 1.1% and 2.5%.
Judging from the pace of gradual policy rate adjustment by the BOJ since its first rate hike in 17 years in March 2024, another 25-basis point increase is widely expected by the Dec. 17-18 meeting, six months after the latest policy action on June 15-16. Governor Kazuo Ueda has said the bank will ensure that it will not fall behind the curve in raising rates amid growing upside risks to inflation.
Bond market participants have been sensitive to how Japanese government leaders describe the fiscal and monetary policy coordination framework, reacting to the draft of this year’s basic policy on economic and fiscal management and reform released by the government on June 30.
The yield on 10-year government bonds, a key indicator of borrowing costs for households and businesses, briefly hit a 29-year high of 2.81% on July 3 as bond selling emerged amid concerns that the government may be tacitly telling BOJ policymakers to slow the pace of rate hikes, which in turn could allow inflation to accelerate and erode returns on fixed income securities. Market participants are also wondering how the government will finance multi-year large spending on programs to spur new growth areas and revive declining industries.
In the draft, the government stressed the administration of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi aims to achieve a “strong economy,” and to that end, “it is extremely important to implement appropriate monetary policy that contributes to achieving ‘stable inflation.’”
“We expect the Bank of Japan, in accordance with Article 4 of the Bank of Japan Act and the spirit of the joint statement, to work closely with the government and, while confirming a virtuous cycle of wages and prices, to conduct appropriate monetary policy aimed at achieving the 2% price stability target in a sustained and stable manner,” the draft said.
The latter part on close coordination is nothing new. It has been repeated in the government’s monthly economic report. What drew market attention was the reference to the Bank of Japan Act, which calls on the central bank to “always maintain close contact with the government and exchange views sufficiently, so that its currency and monetary control and the basic stance of the government’s economic policy are mutually compatible.”
As for the joint statement, it dates back to January 2013, when Masaaki Shirakawa, then governor of the bank, agreed to set an explicit 2% inflation target and try to achieve it with monetary easing under pressure from conservative ruling party lawmakers who hinted that they could make the central bank less independence of political influences by rewriting the law. In exchange for the new target, government leaders agreed to state that they would work on fiscal consolidation and structural reforms.
In a recent interview with the public broadcaster NHK, Shirakawa warned that the yen’s value measured by the real effective exchange rate has been declining constantly since 1995 to the level seen in 1970 when the nominal dollar/yen exchange rate was fixed at ¥360. He said the decline essentially reflects Japan’s fragile economic conditions: reduced exporter competitiveness and sluggish domestic business investment amid the falling population. “We have to take seriously,” he said.
Shirakawa called for a faster pace of BOJ rate hikes to unwind large-scale monetary stimulus that had accumulated in a decade from 2013, when he retired and was replaced by Haruhiko Kuroda, a former top Ministry of Finance official who shared a reflationary theory with the then Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
Prime Minister Takaichi, who has expressed support for Abe’s idea of boosting the economy with monetary easing and fiscal spending, has been careful not to publicly comment on what the BOJ should do but news reports said she was not happy with the BOJ rate hikes as they will boost the government’s borrowing costs when she wants to push ahead with a public-private investment plan exceeding ¥370 trillion through fiscal 2040.
The recent slide in global crude oil prices to around pre-Iran war levels is good news for households and businesses but the stubbornly weak value of the yen will continue to keep import costs high.
Japan’s efforts to diversify the sources of crude oil and naphtha from the Middle East appear to have eased domestic shortages of materials, at least temporarily, and supported business confidence in the BOJ’s quarterly Tankan survey released last week but the remaining impact of the Mideast conflict is expected to be felt in June producer prices data.
The median forecast of a 6.6% year-on-year increase in the corporate goods price index would be an acceleration from a 6.3% rise in May and remain the highest since 7.4% recorded in March 2023.
The costs of essential goods are stuck at high levels, keeping consumers cautious, and household spending for May is forecast to post its sixth straight year-on-year dip. Consumer inflation has stayed below the BOJ’s 2% target in recent months but that is because of temporary effects of fiscal measures: fuel subsidies aimed at easing the impact of the Mideast conflict as well as free high school education that took effect in April.
Japan’s real average household spending is expected to post a sixth straight year-on-year drop in May, down 2.3%, after a slight 0.5% dip in April, as consumers remain cautious amid elevated costs of living. It is also in payback for a 4.7% jump in May 2025, which was driven mainly by vehicle purchases after the supply of new vehicles had recovered from suspended output at Toyota group factories over safety check scandals. At the time there was also post-pandemic pickup in eating out and strong demand for air conditioners.
The Mideast conflict and the depreciation of the yen have kept import and production costs high, which are expected to have more spillover effects on consumer prices in coming months. The average real wages have crawled above year-earlier levels in recent months as large firms are raising wages to secure qualified employees but those working for smaller firms feel the pace of pay increase is not catching up with inflation.
The expected decrease is likely to be partly offset by solid replacement demand for air conditioners ahead of April 2027 when the government is scheduled to introduce stricter energy saving standards.
On the month, real average expenditures by households with two or more people are forecast to market another month of a strong gain, up 1.9%, after rising 1.6% in April, slumping 1.3% in March and rebounding 1.5% in February.
Many households have been spending less on eating out and offering smaller amounts of gift money at weddings while they have paid higher medical and dental bills in recent months. Inflation is also hurting households. There is also a widespread move to switch to more affordable mobile communications plans.
On the supply side, official data released last week showed that retail sales surged 5.3% rise on the year in May, coming in much stronger than expected and hitting the highest pace since 5.4% in November 2023, as demand for vehicles, particularly used ones, continued to pick up, booming stock prices prompted consumers to shop for luxury goods and hot weather appeared to have boosted sales of air conditioners and fans.
Industry data showed department store sales posted their fifth straight year-on-year increase in May, up 8.3%, accelerating from a 5.2% gain in April, as spending by visitors from overseas marked a double-digit percentage jump (+16.7%) as seen in the previous month (+18.3%). There was one more public holiday and one more Sunday compared to a year earlier, which led to solid sales to domestic customers.
The yen remains stubbornly weak despite rounds of currency market intervention by the Ministry of Finance from late April to early May, which supported the purchasing power of visitors from Hong Kong, Taiwan, Malaysia and Singapore, offsetting a 5% drop in spending by Chinese tourists.
Tuesday, July 7
1400 JST (0500 GMT/0100 EDT Tuesday, July 7) The Bank of Japan releases the May consumption activity index. The supply-side indicator, which has a close correlation with revised GDP data, rebounded a real 1.6% on the month in April on a travel balance adjusted basis, after falling 0.4% in March. The April figure posted a 1.3% rise on the January-March quarter, when the index gained 0.6%.
Thursday, July 9
– Bank of Japan branch managers gather at the Tokyo head office for a quarterly meeting to discuss regional economic conditions. In the last regional economic report issued in April, all nine regions described their economies as either recovering moderately, picking up or picking up moderately while five regions continued to note that there were some soft spots. Branch mangers also reported that the spike in crude oil prices and supply chain restraints caused by the Middle East conflict had begun to push up operational costs and lower capacity utilization.
Friday, July 10
0830 JST (2350 GMT/1930 EDT Thursday, July 9) The Bank of Japan releases the June corporate goods price index (CGPI).
Mace News median: CGPI +6.6% y/y (range: +6.4% to +7.2%) vs. May +6.3%; +0.2% m/m (range: +0.0% to +0.7%) vs. May +0.9%
Producer inflation in Japan is expected to continue accelerating to 6.6% in June from 6.3% in May and 5.3% rise in April as energy and transportation costs remained above year-earlier levels and the weak yen kept imports expensive even though crude oil prices had slid to pre-Iran war levels and domestic shortages of naphtha and other materials had eased. The 6.6% year-on-year increase in the corporate goods price index would be the highest since 7.4% recorded in March 2023.
Japan has increased purchases of crude oil and naphtha, the key material for producing plastics and resins, from the United States and other countries to bypass the Middle East. This should help bring the month-on-month increase in the CGPI down to a slower pace of 0.2% after marking sharp gains of 0.9% in May and 2.8% in April, which were driven by high costs of fuels, utilities and petrochemical products.
— SEP Shows Fed Officials See Funds Rate Rising To 3.8% By End ‘26; Back to 3.6% end ’27 – -SEP Inflation Forecast Lifted for
WASHINGTON (MaceNews) – The following is a rough transcript of the responses of the new Federal Reserve chair, Kevin Warsh, to reporters’ questions in his
WASHINGTON (MaceNews) – The drastically abbreviated Federal Open Market policy statement follows, containing no forward guidance, no dissents, no rate change and which drops easing
By Vicki Schmelzer NEW YORK (MaceNews) – Global fund managers pared risk holdings in June, while at the same time remaining “steadfastly bullish” about world
Consensus outlook for Mace News0830 JST (2330 GMT/1930 EDT Thursday, June 18) The Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications releases May CPI.Mace News median: total
Consensus outlook for Mace News 0850 JST (2350 GMT/1950 EDT Tuesday, June 16) The Cabinet Office releases April machinery orders.Mace News median: core orders -0.3%
0850 JST (2350 GMT/1950 EDT Tuesday, June 16) The Ministry of Finance releases May trade.Mace News median: exports +14.8% y/y (range: +10.7% to +19.0%) vs.
–May Trade to Show Solid Exports, April Machinery Orders Seen Flat with Slight Dip, CPI Inflation Tame on Energy Subsidies, Free High School Education By
Contact Mace News President
Tony Mace tony@macenews.com
to find a customer- and markets-oriented brand of news coverage with a level of individualized service unique to the industry. A market participant told us he believes he has his own White House correspondent as Mace News provides breaking news and/or audio feeds, stories, savvy analysis, photos and headlines delivered how you want them. And more. And this is important because you won’t get it anywhere else. That’s MICRONEWS. We know how important to you are the short advisories on what’s coming up, whether briefings, statements, unexpected changes in schedules and calendars and anything else that piques our interest.
No matter the area being covered, the reporter is always only a telephone call or message away. We check with you frequently to see how we can improve. Have a question, need to be briefed via video or audio-only on a topic’s state of play, keep us on speed dial. See the list of interest areas we cover elsewhere
on this site.
—
You can have two weeks reduced price no-obligation trial for $199. No self-renewing contracts. Suspend, renew coverage at any time. Stay with a topic like trade while its hot and suspend coverage or switch coverage areas when it’s not. We serve customers one by one 24/7.
—
Tony Mace was the top editorial executive for Market News International for two decades.
Washington Bureau Chief Denny Gulino had the same title at Market News for 18 years.
Similar experience undergirds our service in Ottawa, London, Brussels and in Asia.