Friday, January 31, 2014

Most Japanese firms set for sales, profit growth: survey hollywoodtone.blogspot.com

Written By ADMIN; About: Most Japanese firms set for sales, profit growth: survey hollywoodtone.blogspot.com on Friday, January 31, 2014

hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Most Japanese firms set for sales, profit growth: survey

Nearly 70 percent of listed Japanese companies are likely to post sales and profit growth this business year, a sign they are gaining traction after years of deflation, a report said Saturday.


More than 1,000 companies out of about 1,500 firms listed on stock markets are on track to log annual rises in both sales and recurring profits for the business year ending in March, the Nikkei business daily said.


The 1,500 companies are expected to post a combined 10 percent rise in sales and a 28 percent increase in recurring profit, the daily said, citing its tally of the companies' forecasts.


The robust earnings are thanks to stronger exports business benefiting from a weaker yen, while domestic consumer spending is also picking up, it said.


Companies are making a steady shift to making profits out of higher sales from the past practice of eking out gains by restructuring businesses, it said.


The tally excluded firms in the financial sector and the report did not mention net profit.


The Nikkei said manufacturers were driving the overall improvement in corporate earnings, with sales expected to jump 16 percent for steelmakers, 14 percent for automakers, and 13 percent for machinery makers.


Companies driven by domestic demand are benefiting from a resurgence in consumer spending, it said, pointing to soaring higher sales of jewellery and expensive watches.


Japanese stock prices have jumped and the yen plunged since late 2012 owing to a policy blitz dubbed Abenomics, which meshes government spending with massive central bank monetary easing aimed at stemming 15 years of deflation.


A weak yen is positive for Japanese exporters but inflates the cost of imports.


Japan's two biggest airlines said Friday that the weak yen sent fuel costs soaring and profits into a nosedive in the nine months to December.


hollywoodtone.blogspot.com Most Japanese firms set for sales, profit growth: survey