Japan's manufacturing confidence has surged to its highest level in over four years, driven by the chemical and petroleum sectors and a recovery in the semiconductor market. According to Jin10, a Reuters Tankan survey revealed that the manufacturing sentiment index rose to 18 in March, marking its highest point since December 2021. The chemical industry confidence index jumped to 21, largely due to increased demand in chip-related sectors. Meanwhile, the petroleum and ceramics industry index climbed to 25, and the transport machinery sector saw its confidence index rise to 36.
Despite these gains, challenges remain due to ongoing Middle East conflicts, rising costs, and weak demand, which continue to pressure the outlook. Some sectors lagged behind, with the textile, paper, and pulp industries experiencing a significant drop in confidence from 20 to 11. A manager from a paper and pulp company noted that the U.S.-Iran conflict has led customers to adopt a wait-and-see approach, making future demand difficult to predict.
The steel and non-ferrous metals industries remain deeply negative, with a confidence index of -25, attributed mainly to weakening orders for automotive-related steel. In contrast, the non-manufacturing sentiment index held steady at 25 in March.