Japan Machinery Orders Fall More than Expected

2026-07-15 00:11 By Farida Husna 1 min. read

Japan’s core machinery orders, which exclude volatile sectors such as ships and electric utilities, plunged 12.4% mom to JPY 962.0 billion in May 2026, far worse than market forecasts for a 4.2% decline and a reversal from an 8.7% gain in the prior month.

It was the third monthly decline so far this year and the steepest drop since December 2019, reflecting broad-based weakness in business investment.

Orders from manufacturers dropped 14.9% (vs 5.1% in April), while non-manufacturing orders fell 9.3% (vs 6.7%).

Among manufacturers, the steepest declines came from shipbuilding (-80.5%), information and communication electronics (-23.6%), and business-oriented machinery (-14.3%).

In the non-manufacturing sector, orders weakened notably in real estate (-69.3%), transport and postal (-23.3%), and goods leasing (-18.6%).

On an annual basis, machinery orders fell 1.5%, swinging from April's 15.6% surge and missing estimates for a 12.9% gain and pointing to the fastest drop in six months.



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Japan Machinery Orders Fall More than Expected
Japan’s core machinery orders, which exclude volatile sectors such as ships and electric utilities, plunged 12.4% mom to JPY 962.0 billion in May 2026, far worse than market forecasts for a 4.2% decline and a reversal from an 8.7% gain in the prior month. It was the third monthly decline so far this year and the steepest drop since December 2019, reflecting broad-based weakness in business investment. Orders from manufacturers dropped 14.9% (vs 5.1% in April), while non-manufacturing orders fell 9.3% (vs 6.7%). Among manufacturers, the steepest declines came from shipbuilding (-80.5%), information and communication electronics (-23.6%), and business-oriented machinery (-14.3%). In the non-manufacturing sector, orders weakened notably in real estate (-69.3%), transport and postal (-23.3%), and goods leasing (-18.6%). On an annual basis, machinery orders fell 1.5%, swinging from April's 15.6% surge and missing estimates for a 12.9% gain and pointing to the fastest drop in six months.
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Japan’s core machinery orders, which exclude volatile sectors such as ships and electric power, rose by 8.7% month-on-month to JPY 1,098.5 billion in April 2026, far exceeded market expectations for a 0.9% gain and marked a sharp rebound from the 9.4% decline recorded in March. The recovery was driven by a 5.1% increase in manufacturing orders to JPY 513.5 billion and a 6.7% rise in non-manufacturing orders excluding utilities to JPY 570.1 billion. Among manufacturers, strong gains were recorded in ship building (+160.7%), textile mill products (+61.7%), and non-ferrous metals (+51.3%). In the non-manufacturing sector, real estate (+107.7%), transportation and postal activities (+36.9%), and goods leasing (+32.7%) posted notable increases. On an annual basis, core machinery orders grew by 15.6%, beating market forecasts for a 9.3% gain and accelerating from a seven-month low of 5.9% rise in the preceding period.
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Japan Machinery Orders Fall the Most in 4 Months
Japan’s core machinery orders, which exclude volatile sectors such as ships and electric power, dropped 9.4% mom to JPY 1,010.9 billion in March 2026, reversing sharply from a 13.6% rise in the prior month and worse than market expectations for an 8.1% decline. It was the steepest decline in machinery orders since last November. Manufacturing orders shrank 14.2% to JPY 488.4 billion, due to weakness across most key industries, including non-ferrous metals (-88.0%), shipbuilding (-51.2%), other transport equipment (-31.2%), textile mill products (-30.2%), petroleum and coal products (-29.6%), and chemical products (-27.9%). Meanwhile, non-manufacturing orders fell 6.0% to JPY 534.3 billion, reversing a 0.8% rise in February. For Q1, machinery orders grew 6.4%. On an annual basis, core machinery orders rose 5.9%, easing sharply from a 24.7% surge previously, marking the softest growth since last November, when machinery orders fell by 6.4%, though the reading beat forecasts of 4.5%.
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