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Japan's Q1 Exports Surge Past 11 Trillion Yen to Hit Record High, Beating Market Consensus with 11.7% YoY Growth

2026-04-22

  1. Core Overview Japan's total exports in March 2026 (Q1 2026) surged to 11,003,319 million yen, a significant leap from the previous month's 9,571,580 million yen. The YoY export growth rate reached 11.7% this time, not only far exceeding February's 4.2% (previous value) but also beating the universally expected 11.0% consensus estimate by analysts. Overall exports achieved a remarkable seven consecutive months of positive growth, even setting a historical new high for single-month export value.

  2. Key Breakdown Disassembled by region and industry, the outstanding performance of outbound shipments was mainly driven by the Asian market and technology products. Regionally, strong double-digit growth was recorded for Taiwan (+27.1%), ASEAN (+19.7%), and China (+17.7%), while exports to the US also saw a slight increase of 3.4%, ending a previous four-month consecutive decline. By industry, electrical machinery surged by 21.5% (primarily driven by chips and ICs), and machinery also grew by 7.1% (mainly driven by semiconductor equipment).

  3. In-depth Attribution Trading Economics pointed out that the weak yen continuously enhanced the export competitiveness of Japanese products, which, coupled with the resilient support of the global tech cycle, became the main engine driving the overall export value. In addition, the headwinds brought by tariff policies have somewhat eased, enabling car exports to the US to successfully stabilize; meanwhile, the explosion in demand for semiconductors and electronic components driven by the global AI boom was the key driving force behind the data exceeding expectations this time.

  4. Outlook and Risks In the short term (1-2 months), due to the strong global tech cycle and the temporary relief of US tariff concerns, Japan's exports are expected to maintain a steady expansionary trend of consecutive positive growth. However, in the medium term (3-6 months), the situation in the Middle East requires close monitoring, as exports to the Middle East have plummeted by 45.9% due to the impact of conflicts; if crude oil prices continue to rise or shipping supply chains are disrupted, it will not only push up Japan's import costs but may also suppress its trade surplus and economic recovery momentum.

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