This Wednesday opened the second half of the year, and the first readings arrived at once. Japan’s business mood held firm, China’s private factories kept their footing, and Beijing’s new rules to keep capital at home formally took effect.
The early pulse was steadier than many had feared, yet the state tightened its grip on the way in. From Tokyo to Beijing, the day’s theme was a single one: a region taking its own measure as a new quarter began.
Today’s Asia Intelligence Brief covers the region’s economy, politics, and markets. We pulled it together from major Asian outlets in Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Hindi, Bahasa Indonesia, and English.
China — The Capital Net Snaps Shut
New Rules Take Effect
Beijing’s new rules to keep capital at home formally took effect today. They aim to keep tech startups listing on domestic exchanges.
They also seek to keep household savings inside the country. The goal is to fund China‘s technology ambitions from within.
The Grip Tightens
The measures mark another step in the state steering its own economy. Money, not just industry, is now firmly in the plan.
For a region watching Beijing, the timing is telling. The visible hand pressed harder as the new half opened.
Japan — Business Mood Holds Firm
A Fifth Straight Lift
The central bank’s quarterly survey showed business confidence rising. Big manufacturers grew more upbeat for a fifth straight quarter.
The headline reading reached its highest level in years. Sales stayed firm, and investment plans held up well.
Steady, For Now
The survey is a closely watched gauge of the economy’s health. It shapes how the central bank thinks about interest rates.
A firmer mood suggests the recovery still has some legs. Confidence, at least, has proved resilient into the new quarter.
China — The Private Engine Holds
A Seventh Month Of Growth
A closely followed private-sector factory gauge held its ground in June. It stayed above the line that separates growth from decline.
It was the seventh straight month in expansionary territory. Smaller, export-oriented firms carried the reading.
The Two-Speed Split
These private exporters outpaced state-owned heavy industry. The gap underlines an economy still moving at two speeds.
The old quarter’s divide simply carried into the new one. One engine hums while much of the rest still waits.
Japan — The Profit Warning Beneath
A Quieter Signal
Behind the confident survey headline sat a quieter warning. Big firms expected their profits to soften in the months ahead.
A weak yen lifts the value of exports when converted home. But that boost is now offset by the rising cost of energy.
Sales Firm, Margins Thinner
Companies reported firm sales but thinner expected margins. Small firms, in particular, planned less new investment.
The mood is upbeat, yet the arithmetic is turning harder. Confidence and profit are quietly parting ways.
The Philippines — Past The Fuel Cliff
A Deadline Passes
The calendar turned past a stated limit on the country’s oil supply. The government had warned the cushion would run thin by now.
The Philippines imports almost all of the oil it burns. A distant shock therefore lands on it with unusual force.
Still Under Strain
As the region’s slowest major economy, it steps into the half strained. It is carried here as an economic story, not a war one.
High fuel costs have squeezed households and cut growth forecasts. The passing of the deadline eases little on its own.
The Region — Month-Start Factory Reads
Fresh Surveys Land
Fresh factory surveys landed across the region as the new quarter opened. They offered an early read on the health of industry.
The global technology upcycle kept carrying the big exporters. Electronics and chips remained the region’s brightest thread.
Demand Still Lags
Yet domestic demand lagged in several markets across Asia. Inflation and weak confidence held consumers back.
The picture echoed the two-speed pattern seen elsewhere. Exports lead, and home spending trails behind.
Indonesia — The Steady Anchor Holds
A Balanced Performer
Indonesia held its interest rate after a run of increases. Inflation sat near the top of its target range.
A large domestic market kept the economy on an even keel. It remained the region’s steadier, more balanced performer.
Ballast In A Slowdown
Where export-led peers wobbled, Indonesia leaned on its consumers. Breadth gave it a cushion against external shocks.
The new quarter’s opening readings continued to reward it. Balance, not a single engine, is its quiet strength.
The Region — A Distant Cost
The Fuel-Cost Shadow
A far-off shipping shock kept lifting fuel-import costs this week. Many Asian economies buy their energy from abroad.
It is carried here as a single neutral line, a matter of prices, not war. The pressure lands hardest on the region’s big importers.
An Edge, Not A Centre
The shock sits at the edge of the Asian story, not its heart. The day’s real drama was in the quarter’s first readings.
Still, a high fuel price quietly makes every figure harder. It is the shared backdrop to a new half-year.
The Read
The region stepped into a new quarter and took its own pulse, and the first readings came back steadier than feared, even as the state pressed harder on the way in. The first reading of a new quarter is a mirror held up quickly, showing both resilience and the hand of the state on the glass.
In Japan a closely watched survey lifted the business mood for a fifth straight quarter, though beneath it sat a quiet warning about softer profits, while in China private factories held their footing for a seventh month even as Beijing’s rules to keep capital at home took effect. Across the region the old quarter’s two-speed divide simply carried over, with technology and exports leading and home demand still lagging.
Beneath it all, a distant shipping shock kept lifting fuel costs, a quiet pressure from beyond the region’s control. The lesson of the day was a steadying one: the first pulse of a new quarter tells whether the old one’s strains still hold.
What to Watch
Today · China’s new rules to keep capital and startups at home formally take effect
Today · Japan’s Tankan survey shows business confidence rising to +22, a fifth straight gain
Today · China’s private-sector factory gauge holds at 51.7, a seventh month of growth
Today · Japanese firms warn profits will soften as energy costs offset a weak yen
Today · The Philippines passes a stated limit on its crude-oil supply, still strained
Today · Month-start factory surveys land across the region, led by tech exports
Recent · Indonesia holds its rate near 5.75% as its large home market steadies it
Today · A distant shipping shock keeps lifting fuel-import costs across the region
View original source — Rio Times ↗

