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Japan's PPI Rises to 135.4, Beating Expectations; Energy and Weak Yen Drive Wholesale Inflation to Over Three-Year High

2026-07-10

Japan's Corporate Goods Price Index (PPI) for 2026-06-01 (Q2 2026) stood at 135.4, moving further higher from the previous period's 134.5, continuing its multi-month climb and hitting a recent high. The annualized growth rate reached an impressive 7.1%, not only significantly exceeding the market consensus estimate of 6.8% but also surpassing the previous reading of 6.3%, marking the largest single-month increase in over three years. This indicates that amid an intertwining of internal and external factors, the inflationary pressure faced by Japanese corporations is rapidly intensifying, and the better-than-expected data has heightened market sensitivities regarding monetary policy.

Looking at the key components, the characteristics of imported inflation are extremely evident. According to search data, the yen-denominated import price index saw an annual increase approaching 30% (reaching 29.7%), while export prices also surged by 20.7%. Across product categories, the gains were primarily driven by soaring prices for non-ferrous metals, petroleum and coal products, and chemicals. This reflects that the rapid escalation in upstream raw material costs has broadly permeated through all stages of mid-to-downstream manufacturing.

A deep dive into the driving factors behind this data reveals a dual squeeze from "energy shocks" and a "weak yen." Analysis from "Business Today" points out that soaring international crude oil and petrochemical raw material prices, triggered by the situation in the Middle East, pose a severe challenge to Japan, a country heavily dependent on resource imports. Furthermore, the persistent weakness of the yen has exacerbated the upward pressure on import costs. Companies are forced to absorb or pass on these multiplied burdens in the domestic wholesale market, which has become the core catalyst pushing up the PPI.

Looking ahead to the short-term scenario over the next 1 to 2 months, the strong upward momentum in wholesale prices is expected to gradually transmit to the end-consumer market, further boosting CPI performance and potentially squeezing the real purchasing power of domestic households. In the medium-term outlook of 3 to 6 months, this higher-than-expected inflation data will serve as a key catalyst for the Bank of Japan's (BOJ) monetary policy normalization. The market is closely watching whether the central bank will issue more hawkish guidance, accelerate the pace of interest rate hikes, or reduce the scale of its bond purchases. If the yen's depreciation and geopolitical risks cannot be effectively contained, the market volatility resulting from subsequent monetary tightening will be a potential risk for which investors must remain strictly prepared.

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