In May, Taiwan experienced a worse industrial production growth. The IP in May expanded by a mere 0.1% mom is the lowest growth rate seen since 1999. After seeing an exceptional decline in May, the island's industrial production (IP) is likely to recover part of its strength in June.
After seasonal adjustment, the outright declines in IP of more than 2% in two consecutive months were never seen before except during the two recessions in 2001 and 2008. External demand has been soft in recent months, but it was not as dreadful as in the previous recessions when the average pace of declines in export orders was 20% yoy.
According to Societe Generale, "We believe IP growth in May was too weak to persist. However, given that there is an unfavourable base effect in June, IP is expected to have rebounded modestly to -1.1% yoy from -3.2% yoy in May. Still, IP growth will have declined sharply from 5.8% yoy in Q1 to -1% yoy in Q2, pointing to weaker Q2 GDP growth."
At the same time, mild increases in wholesale and consumer prices likely favoured commercial sales in June. A slightly smaller decline in the headline figure is expected. Real retail sales are expected to have accelerated in June, given the tight labour market and slower imports of consumer goods, adds SocGen.


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