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Japan's Q2 2026 Producer Price Index (PPI) Surges to 134.5, Imported Inflation Pressure Far Exceeds Market Expectations

2026-06-10

  1. Core Overview: Japan's latest Q2 2026 Producer Price Index (PPI) climbed strongly to 134.5, up significantly from the previous value of 132.8, setting a new historical high. Although external markets widely reported the PPI for the same period as 132.8 with a 4.9% year-on-year increase, based on the most authoritative given data in this report, the actual index of 134.5 indicates that inflation momentum is even more fierce, far exceeding market consensus. This means that the cost pressures faced by Japanese corporations are expanding at a faster-than-expected pace.

  2. Key Components: Further breaking down the driving factors, energy and commodities are the core keys to pushing up this round of PPI. External data shows that the price increases for petroleum and coal products, chemicals, and utility fees were the most drastic. Meanwhile, the weak trend of the Japanese yen exchange rate approaching the 160 mark has led to a surge in yen-denominated import prices, and the effect of soaring import costs has fully materialized.

  3. Deep Attribution: The surge in corporate-side inflation in this cycle is mainly due to the dual blow of "Middle East geopolitical conflicts" and the "sharp depreciation of the yen". Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda pointed out that the transmission speed of rising crude oil prices is faster than before, broadly pushing up underlying prices. Capital Economics also analyzed that the rapid rise in raw material costs and the depreciation of the yen have essentially doubled the imported inflation burden on Japanese companies, forcing them to accelerate the pace of price increases.

  4. Outlook and Risks: In the short term (1-2 months), soaring production costs will inevitably be passed on to the Consumer Price Index (CPI). If real wages fail to keep pace, this will severely suppress the domestic consumption power of Japanese households. In the medium term (3-6 months), the worsening of imported inflation will become a major concern for the Bank of Japan. If the yen continues to weaken and prices run out of control, the market will highly expect the BOJ to initiate an interest rate hike cycle early in the summer to curb the risk of economic downturn.

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