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The meeting of China’s National People’s Congress will be watched very closely by markets next week. South Korea’s consumer inflation is expected to ease below 2%, while Japan’s labor cash earnings and Taiwan’s trade data are expected to grow.
China: National People’s Congress meeting in the week aheadThe big event locally for next week will be the meeting of China’s Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, which will take place between 4-8 November. This will be watched very closely by markets, which are hoping for a decision to adjust budget deficit targets or announce specifics for new special bond issuance. This consequently would shed more light on the potential scale of fiscal policy measures ahead.A Reuters report indicated that the package could be as large as RMB10tr spread over three to five years. That represents a headline number which has been on the higher side of estimates, but in annual terms, a figure between RMB2-3tr is in line with our expectations. The slow rollout of fiscal stimulus has cooled off some of the initial market enthusiasm after the announcement of monetary policy measures in September, but a large headline number for a new fiscal package could renew enthusiasm.In terms of data, it is a relatively quiet week ahead, with trade data set to be published on Thursday. We are looking for export growth to benefit from a supportive base effect to see a slight uptick on the month to around 5% year-on-year, but for import growth to fall into negative territory to -5.0% YoY after hovering near the zero bound the last two months.
South Korea: Consumer inflation expected to ease below 2%Consumer inflation is expected to continue to ease below 2% in October on the back of falling fresh food prices and base effects. Fresh food prices are expected to fall as supply conditions improve with better harvests and increased imports, while petrol prices at the pump rose slightly in October.The government’s efforts to curb inflation continued as utility prices remained unchanged, while the Seoul Metropolitan Government postponed its plan to raise subway fares until next year. We expect CPI to stay below the Bank of Korea’s target of 2% for a considerable time, and the BoK is therefore likely to continue its policy easing – albeit at a glacial pace.
Japan: Labor cash earningsWe expect labor cash earnings to grow 3.5% YoY in September, accelerating from the previous month’s 2.8%. More importantly, real cash earnings are likely to rebound as inflation cools down at a faster pace in September. We believe private consumption is likely to recover with better income conditions, which should support the Bank of Japan’s policy normalization in the coming months.
Taiwan: Trade data expected to bounce backTaiwan will publish its trade data on Friday. We are expecting a bounce back of export growth to around 9.5% YoY and a moderation of import growth toward 10.7% YoY in October after a few choppy months of data in the last three months.
Key events in Asia next weekSource: Refinitiv, INGMore By This Author: