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    Japan says economy in modest recovery, caution over global slowdown

    The government also retained its caution over the impact of global monetary tightening, price hikes and supply constraint in its monthly report. It will continue to closely monitor financial market fluctuations and China’s COVID-19 situation, the report said.The new economic assessment comes after data last week showed Japan’s economy averted recession but rebounded much less than expected in the fourth quarter last year as business investment slumped.”The economy is picking up moderately, although some weakness is seen recently,” the Cabinet Office said in its monthly economic assessment, which was unchanged from January. Consumer spending, which accounts for more than half of Japan’s gross domestic product (GDP), was “recovering moderately” as people spent on eating at restaurants and travelling as well as purchasing autos, according to the report. The government’s campaign to subsidise domestic travel and the easing of border control steps boosted tourism, the report said. The Cabinet Office described exports as “weakening recently”, unchanged from the January report. Japan’s shipments to Asia weakened due to impacts from China’s coronavirus wave and softer demand for the semiconductor market. These also impacted manufacturers’ production activities. The Cabinet Office said recovery in Japan’s factory output was “stalling” in the latest report. Uninspiring data highlights the delicate task at hand for academic Kazuo Ueda, the government’s nominee to become the next central bank governor, as he plots a path to normalising the bank’s ultra-easy policy without derailing a fragile economic recovery. More

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    South Korea’s ‘jeonse’ rent-free renters hit by property downturn

    SEOUL (Reuters) – A downturn in South Korea’s home prices is causing pain in the country’s unusual rent-free rental system that benefited landlords and tenants alike during a long surge in residential property prices.In the “jeonse” scheme, tenants put up a deposit typically worth as much as 70% of the home’s value, then live without paying rent for two years until the landlord returns the full amount.This was a win-win for residents and owners for years as home prices rose and interest rates were high: the loan tenants paid to raise their deposit was cheaper than rent and landlords got an interest-free loan to deploy as they pleased.Jeonse tenancy has been particularly popular among people in their 20s and 30s, who could not afford the full price of a home but could use the system to get a toehold into the Korean dream of home ownership.But median house prices have fallen 12% and jeonse prices 7% over the two years to January after surging 37% and 24%, respectively, over the preceding four years, according to Korea Real Estate Board data. ‘THOUGHT I WOULD BE JUST FINE’Overextended landlords are failing to return deposits, hitting younger tenants especially hard and threatening to undermine trust in the system. Yoo Ha-jin, 28, regrets not getting insurance for her jeonse deposit when she signed in March 2021. Her bankrupt landlord told her in December the property would be auctioned and she could expect to get around 45% of her deposit back at most.That means she will owe at least 33 million won ($25,000) for the loan she took out on her jeonse contract expiring next month.”I thought I would be just fine as long as I could get a jeonse deposit loan from the bank,” Yoo told Reuters.Insurance claims for failed jeonse repayments more than doubled last year to a record 1.17 trillion won ($903 million), according to Korea Housing and Urban Guarantee Corp, one of the country’s three major guarantors.Tenants in their 20s and 30s accounted for 70% of the total.Financial authorities are working closely with other agencies to support jeonse tenants and landlords having difficulty with refunds, said an official at the Financial Services Commission.Police are cracking down on jeonse-related crimes, saying organised fraud cases more than tripled last year to 622.Jeonse deposit loans more than quadrupled in less than six years through October to 172 trillion won ($132 billion), according to the central bank. That equals 17% of South Korea’s outstanding mortgages and 10% of household debt.PROPERTY FALLOUTStill, almost all jeonse loans have guarantees from public enterprises, leaving little credit risk for commercial lenders.”The jeonse crisis poses limited macroeconomic risks, yet it is still another part of the whole property market fallout,” said economist Moon Hong-cheol at DB Financial Investment.Unexpected debt burdens on young people could exacerbate risks for the property market, a key sector that drives growth and affects financial markets. Fears of defaults on real estate projects last year triggered a credit crunch in South Korea’s financial markets.Some investment banks, such as Nomura and Citi, predict the Bank of Korea will start cutting interest rates as soon as the next three to six months to engineer a soft landing for the property market.”It is frustrating there is really no one to blame,” said Yoo, the stranded jeonse tenant. “I just think maybe I could have avoided this kind of trouble, had I had enough money to purchase my own house.”($1 = 1,295.8700 won) More

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    A neglected tool of central banks shows its worth

    Money supply numbers have long been an orphan in the tool kit of the big central banks. This is unfortunate because the numbers have been sending important signals before and during the pandemic.Economists at the Bank for International Settlements have found a statistically and economically significant correlation across a range of countries between excess money growth in 2020 and average inflation in 2021 and 2020. And you do not have to be an out and out devotee of the quantity theory of money to see that the buoyancy of US house prices and equities last year was substantially about too much money chasing too few assets.There is, of course, a reason for this central bankerly neglect of money. In the heyday of monetary targeting in the 1980s central bankers — most notably Paul Volcker at the US Federal Reserve — were remarkably successful in bringing down inflation from record postwar levels after successive oil price shocks, although this came at the cost of savage recessions. Subsequently the link between money supply and inflation weakened.This was down to velocity, the measure of how often money changes hands. When this happened at a predictable pace, money and output grew together. At the same time there was a clear relationship between inflation and excess money growth — the difference between money growth and growth in real gross domestic product.But as inflation came down in the 1980s and 1990s velocity became highly unstable, in part because of financial innovation and changes in banking regulation. So the link between money supply and nominal GDP broke down and the information content of money supply numbers became a less helpful guide for policy. As trying to fathom the numbers became more complicated monetarism went out of fashion. The exception was when central bankers confronted financial crises, where they reserved the right to turn on the monetary hosepipe.Interpreting money numbers was once again conspicuously difficult after the financial crisis of 2007-09. Monetarists warned that the stimulus from the Fed’s asset buying would lead to rapid inflation. Yet velocity dropped sharply and the outcome was a strange combination of asset price inflation and the threat of deflation in prices of goods and services. Why, then, are the figures now telling a clearer story?In the recent BIS study, Claudio Borio, Boris Hofmann and Egon Zakrajšek found that the strength of the link between money growth and inflation across a large sample of advanced and emerging market countries depended on whether there was a high inflation regime or a low one. In a high inflation regime the link was one to one; in a low regime it was virtually non-existent.The BIS authors point out that the recent flare-up in inflation was preceded by an upsurge in money growth. Countries with stronger money growth saw markedly higher inflation. Yet they caution against assuming causality, arguing that the debate on this has not been fully settled. But, they add, money growth figures can still have useful information content for inflation.There are many other reasons why central banks failed to foresee the inflation flare-up. Their economic models often relied heavily on extrapolations of the recent past and assumptions about the economic cycle. Clearly the pandemic and the war in Ukraine were exceptional events that had nothing to do with any cycle.At the same time the central banks’ asset purchasing programmes have distorted market expectations. Otmar Issing, former chief economist and board member of the European Central Bank, now at Goethe University in Frankfurt, argues that investors with higher inflation expectations have tended to sell their bonds to central banks at prices they regarded as high. As a result these inflation pessimists have been absent from financial markets, causing the thermometer of inflation expectations to read lower than the actual temperature. A more obvious point is that central bankers badly underestimated the second-round effects of oil and food price hikes in labour and other markets.The risk of not looking at money now lies in the other direction. The Fed has been tightening, as have others. Steve Hanke and Caleb Hofmann of Johns Hopkins University say that by December last year the three-month annualised growth rate of broad money (M2) in the US had sunk to a stunning minus 5.4 per cent pushing the year-on-year growth rate into negative territory. One conclusion: the equity market is currently too sanguine about avoiding a recession. Another: time for a rethink about [email protected] More

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    The World Bank prepares for a new, greener mission

    At a small rural farm about an hour’s drive from the Zambian capital city of Lusaka in late January, US Treasury secretary Janet Yellen stood before a gathering of farmers and told them she understood the destruction that global warming was causing.“We know that over the past decade, storms, floods, and droughts in Africa have increased in severity and frequency,” Yellen told her audience in Chongwe. “Climate change is not just a future threat; it is already here.” Her remarks stood in stark contrast with those made last year by another of America’s most senior economists: David Malpass, president of the World Bank. The multilateral lender, created with the twin goals of alleviating poverty and pursuing shared global prosperity, was increasingly being asked to help tackle the impacts of climate change too.Yet, when asked at a September event if he believes in human-made global warming, the Trump appointee repeatedly dodged the question. “I’m not a scientist,” he said. The comment sparked a furore and sharpened criticism of the World Bank for not taking the scale of the climate crisis seriously. Although Malpass later walked back the remark, Al Gore, former vice-president of the US, the bank’s largest shareholder, was among those calling on the Biden administration to fire him. “It’s ridiculous to have a climate denier at the head of the World Bank,” Gore said in a September interview.The pressure on the World Bank chief only grew more intense from there. In mid-October, 10 countries — the G7 plus Australia, the Netherlands and Switzerland — submitted a paper to the World Bank urging it to “refresh its vision” and align itself with the goals of the Paris Agreement to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions. Janet Yellen on her visit to Zambia last month. The US Treasury secretary and others view alleviating poverty and tackling climate change as a unified ambition © Namukola Siyumbwa/ReutersA plan outlined by the bank early in January for how it would incorporate climate change, and other global issues such as pandemic preparedness, into its work was dismissed by major shareholders as being not ambitious enough.Some blamed the clunky, bureaucratic machinery of the institution for tempering the political energy of the moment. The Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act, passed over the summer, had set the US on a path to a cleaner energy future, and was hailed as a milestone in the country’s approach to tackling climate change.Then on Tuesday, a few weeks after Yellen’s return from Zambia, Malpass made a call to the US Treasury to say he would end his term in June, almost a year early. Officials were caught on the back foot. Although frustrated with the slow pace of change at the bank, in closed-door meetings in Washington Yellen had argued that removing an official appointed by Biden’s predecessor would set a bad political precedent. Yellen and many others view alleviating poverty and tackling climate change as a unified ambition, rather than distinct goals. Now, many of the World Bank’s member countries want climate to be at the centre of its mission, and not at the periphery.Less wealthy nations have been pushing for better lending terms and other support to help them adapt to increasing temperatures, rising sea levels and more extreme weather events, and pay for the transition to clean energy systems. “For us climate is development, climate is poverty — so the distinction is not that obvious,” says Ali Mohammed, climate adviser to Kenyan president William Ruto. “Climate change has affected every sphere of human development and livelihoods.”Wealthy countries responsible for the bulk of historic pollution, meanwhile, are increasingly looking to the World Bank as a source of international climate finance on a scale they cannot provide, as they confront difficult questions about who should pay for the catastrophic impacts of hurricanes, floods and wildfires.The scale of the task is formidable: $125tn of climate investment will be needed by 2050 if the world is to slash emissions and meet the Paris Agreement goals of limiting warming to well below 2C, according to research commissioned by the UN high-level climate action champions.

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    “If we really want this [climate] agenda to move, there is no other way other than to have the multilateral development banks [MDBs] expand considerably,” says Homi Kharas, a senior fellow in the Center for Sustainable Development, housed in the global economy and development programme at Brookings. Given its size and influence, he adds, “it all starts with the World Bank.”The US traditionally appoints the World Bank president, and is now racing to draw up a shortlist of candidates with climate credentials who could refashion the bank while balancing the interests of its almost 200 member states. Among many shareholders and climate-minded bank officials, a period of pessimism and turbulence is receding in favour of a new optimism that Malpass’s successor might mean the start of a new era. “There’s a great hope that whoever comes next can meet the moment on climate change,” says one development official. “Malpass was really one of the last vestiges of the Trump administration.”Yet for others, there are fears that a new climate-oriented mission might distract from the bank’s traditional development mandate.The Bridgetown agendaThe seeds of the World Bank and its sister organisation the IMF were sown at the Bretton Woods conference in 1944, to help the world recover from the economic ravages of war and create a new monetary system. Almost 80 years on, some say it’s time for a new global economic compact designed to tackle the existential threat of climate change. One of the leading voices is Mia Mottley, the prime minister of Barbados, who has called for “a new internationalism”, and argued that the Bretton Woods institutions “no longer serve the purpose in the 21st century that they served in the 20th century”. Malpass at the World Bank and IMF annual meetings last year. The organisations were founded in 1944 to help the world recover from the economic ravages of war and create a new monetary system © Graeme Sloan/Sipa USA/ReuterMottley, whose campaign has been called “the Bridgetown agenda”, has pushed for a greater use of concessional finance such as low-interest, long-term debt instruments to finance clean-energy development across the world, as well as climate-resilient infrastructure. Smaller nations must be able to tackle climate change without falling into unsustainable debt, she argues.Mottley’s vision has attracted the public backing of French president Emmanuel Macron, who threw his weight behind her ambitious calls for reform during the COP27 UN climate summit in Egypt last year. Other countries have called on MDBs to fund investments that benefit countries worldwide — and, in particular, to help rapidly growing middle-income countries shift their economies away from coal, the most polluting fossil fuel. In response to these and other calls, the World Bank produced an “evolution road map” that explored what more it could do to tackle climate change and other globally important catastrophes.In its paper, the bank suggested that in order for it to continue financing the world’s poorest countries, while also lending more to middle-income nations to help them achieve their climate goals, it would need an injection of cash from shareholders. But the plea for more cash was universally criticised by the bank’s big donor shareholders, including the US, which have had their budgets squeezed by the pandemic, inflation and an energy crisis. Mia Mottley, prime minister of Barbados, has led calls for a new global economic compact that enables smaller nations to tackle climate change without falling into unsustainable debt © Dante Carrer/ReutersJoe Thwaites, an international climate finance advocate at non-profit the Natural Resources Defense Council, said the road map was “a distinct combination of navel gazing and finger pointing . . . Fundamentally, it doesn’t strike me as grasping the scale of the problem.”A senior government official at the German ministry for economic co-operation and development agrees, saying: “I would not say that the bank hasn’t progressed. But the bank is not where the bank should be.” The World Bank says discussions around the road map were “a shareholder-led process” and added that the bank would not comment on the views of its shareholders.According to the bank, it increased its climate finance from $10.9bn to $31.7bn over the past seven years. Although the bank’s climate finance measured as a proportion of its overall lending has steadily increased, according to independent analysis by climate group NRDC, it still lags behind three other large MDBs, including the European Investment Bank and the African Development Bank. Spending betterRather than give it more money, G7 countries are pushing for the World Bank to look at how it could free up more cash from its balance sheets to supercharge climate spending. One person close to discussions about how to reform the bank says G7 representatives are “concentrating on the idea that the World Bank needs to spend better before it gets more money”.

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    Under its current model, the World Bank has turned relatively modest sums into much bigger numbers, according to an independent review of MDBs commissioned by the G20 and published last year.Between 1944 and June 2021, shareholder countries contributed $19.2bn capital in total to its main lending facility, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. With that capital, IBRD has issued more than $750bn in loans and $23bn in grants to the world’s poorest countries, as well as covering the costs of its global development data and research.But the G20 report said that the MDBs could do more still if they took certain steps. With “very manageable changes to risk tolerance” they could boost their lending capacity by “several hundreds of billions of dollars over the medium term” while still maintaining their credit ratings. The World Bank has for decades maintained that holding a triple A rating from all three major credit rating agencies is essential for its operations. Shareholders, too, benefit from the bank being able to access low-cost funding from bond markets, which is where the bulk of the bank’s funding comes from, and developing countries have warned against losing the rating. But the report said the MDBs were possibly being more conservative than they needed to be to maintain a top triple-A credit rating. Shareholders ought to reconsider how much risk they wanted the institutions to take, it said, and consider allowing the banks to make changes such as adjusting the amount of capital they held against loans and how they treated their “callable capital”, or money they could summon from shareholders in the event of a financial emergency. Avinash Persaud, climate adviser to Barbados leader Mottley, says the report highlighted that “if you need to get to a totally different type of scale of lending, you can’t do it using the old fashioned approach of paid-in capital”.If the World Bank takes up the G20 reforms and can convince countries to increase capital, then even a modest injection would have a huge impact, says Lord Nicholas Stern, one of the institution’s former chief economists.“What people don’t understand is how much value for money is in a capital increase,” says Stern, who is chair of the Grantham Research Institute at LSE. “For very modest sums you could double the [World Bank’s] lending. It could have an enormous effect.” Although the bank has publicly welcomed the G20’s recommendations, multiple shareholders told the Financial Times that the institution had not yet started exploring its most ambitious proposals. Two shareholders say there were concerns that the bank was “slow walking” the recommendations.The cost of changeNot all countries, particularly those that primarily borrow from the World Bank, are comfortable with the institution taking on a greener hue. Some large fossil fuel-reliant shareholders — including the petrostate Saudi Arabia plus Russia and India, along with major African and Latin American countries — are pushing back against the bank morphing into a “green bank”.Others are worried that a focus on climate may come at the expense of money for development, or result in more money for middle-income nations and less for the very poorest. Amar Bhattacharya, a senior fellow in the Center for Sustainable Development, says there was a perception among some developing countries that “the climate agenda is being imposed on them”.“They see an element of luxury in the climate agenda that we are trying to push,” he says. “As one executive director said to me, ‘I don’t want the World Bank to stop doing what it’s doing in health and education.’” A recent note by the G11 group of developing nations about potential World Bank reforms, seen by the FT, said that “promoting development is at the very reason for each World Bank Group institution’s existence”. It was important that they remained “focused on the purpose for which they were established”.The note was signed by countries including Brazil, Pakistan, India, Indonesia, China, Saudi Arabia, Russia and more than two dozen African nations.Climate protesters outside the World Bank headquarters in Washington DC last year. The bank is under intense pressure to outline stronger plans for improving its response to climate change © James Lawler Duggan/ReutersFaten Aggad, an adviser at the African Climate Foundation, says there were also concerns among some developing nations that rich countries were looking to “shift” their responsibilities for providing climate finance “to the multilateral development banks”.Supporters of reform insist this is not an either/or proposition. “There’s no horse race between climate on the one hand and development and poverty on the other,” says Stern. “Sometimes it’s set up that way . . . I think that’s a very serious mistake. If we fail on one we fail on the other.”Looking aheadMalpass’s departure has cleared the way for the US to propose a president with the financial markets literacy to study how far the bank can comfortably adjust its business model and formalise its commitment to tackling climate change. The US Treasury is drawing up a shortlist of potential successors that is expected to include Samantha Power, head of the US Agency for International Development, Rockefeller Foundation president Rajiv Shah and World Trade Organization director-general Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. The next major flashpoint is the bank’s spring meetings, to be held in Washington DC in April, where it will be under intense pressure from the US and others to outline more concrete plans for improving its response to climate change. “There are crunch discussions and decisions coming in the spring meetings,” says Stern. The US has suggested that “easy wins” could be implementing some of the smaller points in the G20-commissioned report, such as slightly lowering the bank’s equity-to-loan ratio and using hybrid capital instruments. Malpass said last week that the bank’s shareholders were already considering proposals to lower the lender’s equity-to-loan ratio by one percentage point, in a move that could free up about $4bn.Yellen has also urged the World Bank to engage in “stronger” mobilisation of private finance, and some shareholders want the reform effort to include new targets for the institution linked to how much private capital the bank leverages, rather than on how much money it lends. Another G7 shareholder says more difficult conversations — around how the bank assessed the risk of its lending operations, for example — could now be accelerated.“Shareholders feel a sense of resolve,” says Persaud, Mottley’s climate adviser. “We want to raise back the ambition that somehow went into retreat.” More

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    RBA considered 50 bps hike in February meeting, minutes show

    Investing.com–The Reserve Bank of Australia had considered raising interest rates by 50 basis points during its February meeting, the minutes of the bank’s meeting showed on Tuesday, as it struggled to bring down inflation from overheated levels.The bank had eventually settled on a 25 basis point (bps) hike, raising rates to 3.35 bps. The minutes showed that members of the Reserve Bank Board saw uncertainty around the near-term economic outlook, and that regular meetings gave the bank enough scope to keep raising rates.Still, the board agreed that more interest rate hikes are needed over the coming months to bring down inflation, which is now expected to come within the RBA’s 2% to 3% target range only by 2025.Headline inflation reached an over 30-year high of 7.8% in the December quarter.  The RBA had hiked rates by a cumulative 300 basis points in 2022 as it struggled to control a post-COVID surge in prices. Disruptions in global supply chains also spurred increasing price pressures in the country, the RBA minutes said.Policymakers were also unsure over the path of local inflation, given the increased uncertainty over global inflation trends. Members of the RBA board opined that inflation had likely peaked in December, although this could only be confirmed in the coming months. The board was wary of a coming slowdown in local economic growth, especially as the effects of monetary policy tightening and elevated inflation begin to be felt. While the Australian economy performed well in the second half of 2022, it is expected to run out of momentum in the coming months. Even with a series of sharp rate hikes during 2022, the RBA had attempted to maintain a balance between curbing inflation and sustaining economic growth, aiming to keep the economy on an “even keel.” But the bank has warned that the path to such a scenario is a narrow one, especially with interest rates set to rise further.  More

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    BOJ’s Kuroda: Wage growth to accelerate on tight job market

    TOKYO (Reuters) – Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said on Tuesday wage growth will likely accelerate as companies increase pay to compensate households for the higher cost of living, and cope with an intensifying labour shortage.Speaking in parliament, Kuroda also said the central bank will continue to scrutinise currency market moves and their impact on Japan’s economy in guiding monetary policy. More

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    Bank of Korea to hold rates despite still high inflation: Reuters Poll

    BENGALURU (Reuters) – The Bank of Korea will hold its base interest rate at 3.50% on Thursday and for the rest of this year, suggesting its longest tightening cycle on record is over despite still high inflation, a Reuters poll of economists found.After raising rates by 300 basis points since August 2021, the BOK is managing a shrinking economy – the 0.4% contraction last quarter was the first in 2/1-2 years – as well as falling exports and high household debt.At the same time, consumer price inflation, at 5.20% in January, is well over double the central bank’s 2.00% target and is not expected to return there for at least another year, according to a separate Reuters poll.All 42 economists polled Feb. 13-20 predicted no change to the 3.50% base rate, already the highest since late 2008, at the central bank’s Feb. 23 meeting. Only a few respondents expected rates to climb above 3.50% at some point this year, while nearly half expected at least one rate cut by year-end.Nearly 90% of economists who provided forecasts through the first quarter of next year, 26 of 29, expected the base rate to fall below 3.50% then, with a majority forecasting 3.00% or above, compared with 3.25% or higher in the previous poll. “Domestic demand faces headwinds from high debt-servicing burdens and a faltering property market; consumer sentiment is also subdued and households are deleveraging,” Krystal Tan, economist at ANZ, wrote.”Overall, we remain of the view that the BoK will embark on a prolonged rate pause. We expect the first rate cut to materialise in 2024, when we expect inflation to settle around the 2% mark and the U.S. (Federal Reserve) to pivot.”The BOK’s stance differs from many other global central banks that are expected to carry on raising interest rates, including the Fed. That could put pressure on the Korean won, which is down nearly 3% against the dollar this year. Much will depend on how quickly inflation falls over the coming year. It is down from a peak of 6.3% in July of last year. “Towards the year-end, we expect inflation to converge towards the BOK’s medium-term goal, which would therefore open up the room for the BOK to start cutting rates to bring policy into more neutral territory,” Derrick Kam, Asia economist at Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS), said.”The risks to our view are if inflation turns out to be more persistent than we expect or if there is a meaningful hawkish re-pricing of the U.S. Fed policy trajectory.” (Reporting and polling by Anant Chandak; Editing by Hari Kishan, Ross Finley and Barbara Lewis) More

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    Japan’s factory activity shrinks at fastest pace in 2-1/2 years-PMI

    The au Jibun Bank flash Japan manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) fell to a seasonally adjusted 47.4 in February, from a final 48.9 in the previous month.The index stayed below the 50-level that separates contraction from expansion for a fourth consecutive month and marked the largest decline since August 2020’s 47.2.Factory output and new orders decreased for an eighth straight month and at faster rates than January, the sub-index data showed.Export orders logged the biggest decrease since July 2020 on relentlessly weak global demand as seen in recent indicators such as the slower-than-expected gross domestic product growth in October-December and January’s record trade deficit.By contrast, service-sector activity grew for a six month with further relaxation of domestic COVID-19 countermeasures. The government last month said it would downgrade the coronavirus’s public health classification in May.The au Jibun Bank flash services PMI rose to an eight-month-high of 53.6 seasonally adjusted in February from the previous month’s 52.3 final.”Service providers posted sharper rises in activity and new business as the latest wave of the COVID-19 pandemic faded, providing a boost to demand,” said Andrew Harker, economics director at S&P Global (NYSE:SPGI) Market Intelligence, which compiles the survey.But service firms’ input costs rose at the fastest pace in eight months, while the inflation for prices they charged to customers only advanced to a two-month-high, indicating thinner profits.”Companies will be hoping to see price pressures ease meaningfully in the coming months to provide some support to customer demand,” said Harker.Despite the challenged cost environment, service operators’ confidence improved with the business sentiment sub-index rising from a 10-month-low.Overall, the au Jibun Bank Flash Japan composite PMI was at 50.7 in February, in line with last month’s final figure, as the gloomy manufacturing index was offset by a rosy service PMI. More