The data showed output of cars and other motor vehicles surged 43.1% from the previous month in November.


Japan's factory output jumped at the fastest pace on record in November, as easing global supply chain bottlenecks helped car production leap out of its recent slump, lifting prospects for a strong fourth-quarter economic rebound.
But while improved manufacturing conditions provide some relief for policymakers, persistent global semiconductor shortages and new risks from the Omicron coronavirus variant are expected to cloud the outlook for the world's third-largest economy.
Factory production gained 7.2% in November from the previous month, posting its largest jump since 2013 when comparable data first became available, thanks to rising output of motor vehicles and plastic products.
That meant production rose for the second straight month after increasing 1.8% in October and posted a faster rise than the 4.8% gain expected in a Reuters poll.
"Output recovered to where it was previously because car production rebounded," said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchukin Research Institute.
"But seen from a global perspective, supply bottlenecks and especially the chip shortage are likely to be prolonged so that will slow down the recovery pace of output."
The data showed output of cars and other motor vehicles surged 43.1% from the previous month in November, also a record, while plastic products production rose 9.5%.
Despite the stronger output, Japanese automakers are still unable to completely shake off the drag from persistent global parts and chip supply issues.
Japan's top automaker Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) said last week it would suspend production at five domestic factories in January due to supply issues and the health crisis. read more
Analysts say the auto sector could see a prolonged impact from chip supply snaps as chipmakers focus on producing cutting-edge semiconductors over less advanced chips.
"What is required for cars aren't the state-of-the-art chips," said Chihiro Ohta, general manager for investment research and investor services at SMBC Nikko Securities. "They need old-generation models."
Manufacturers expect output to rise 1.6% in December and 5.0% in January.
However, a Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) official cautioned firms' forecasts in the monthly survey tended to be overly optimistic.
Output of durable consumer goods rose 39%, while that of capital goods, which analysts say is closely related to the capital spending component in gross domestic product (GDP), was unchanged from the previous month.
More broadly, analysts expected Japan's economy will grow an annualised 6.1% in the current quarter, rebounding from a third-quarter slump with consumer and corporate activity expected to recover, a Reuters poll showed this month.
Separate data on Tuesday showed the jobless rate rose to 2.8% from the previous month's 2.7%, while an index gauging job availability was at 1.15, unchanged from October.
SOURCE: REUTERS

Trump’s war on offshore wind faces another lawsuit
- 7 hours ago

Why 2025 was hell for job hunters
- 5 hours ago
Nvidia takes $5 billion stake in Intel under September agreement
- 17 hours ago
Briton Joshua hurt in fatal car crash in Nigeria
- 17 hours ago

The 2025 stories that prove people still run toward danger
- 5 hours ago

The FCC’s foreign drone ban is here
- 7 hours ago

The 60 Minutes report on CECOT that Bari Weiss censored is now internet contraband
- 7 hours ago

The year measles came back
- 5 hours ago

LG announces new UltraGear evo gaming monitors with AI upscaling
- 7 hours ago
CM Afridi flags ‘humiliating tactics’ in letter to CM Maryam Nawaz
- 15 hours ago
Minor boy dies after falling into sewer in Karachi's Korangi
- 17 hours ago
Hamas confirms death of spokesman Abu Obeida, says he was killed by Israel in August
- 15 hours ago








