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The European Union has provided €850,000 in emergency relief to help Vietnam recover from recent storms, while also reaffirming its commitment to expanding multifaceted cooperation under the PCA and EVFTA frameworks...
Thailand posted its widest trade deficit since early 2023, with a surge in imports of capital goods and raw materials from China, even as exports lost momentum after US buyers frontloaded purchases to beat higher tariffs.
Inbound shipments jumped 16.3% in October, beating even the most optimistic forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists, while exports grew just 5.7%, missing estimates. As a result, the country's trade balance swung to a $3.4 billion deficit, from $1.3 billion surplus a month earlier, the Commerce Ministry data showed Tuesday.
The wider deficit underscores imbalances in Thailand's trade-driven economy. A sustained shortfall could weigh on overall growth, pressure the baht and complicate monetary policy at a time when the central bank, as well as Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, are trying to support a fragile economic recovery.
Exports are a key driver of the Thai economy, accounting for more than half of gross domestic product. The country's heavy reliance on international trade makes it vulnerable to currency fluctuations and global tariff policies that can erode competitiveness. Thai shipments to the US, the country's largest export market, face tariffs of up to 19%, weighing further on demand.
The baht has gained more than 5% against the greenback so far this year, outpacing most other Asian currencies and making Thai products more expensive. The baht held gains of 0.4% against the dollar after the release of trade data.
The wider-than-expected trade deficit "may be positive as it should help ease pressure on Thailand's current account surplus and the baht strength," Nantapong Chiralerspong, director-general of the Trade Policy and Strategy Office, told reporters.
Exports to the US rose 32.9% from a year ago, the 25th straight month of growth, driven by computers and parts, machinery and steel. Shipments to China grew 9.3% last month, according to the Commerce Ministry.
The yen looks set to appreciate nearly 10% against the dollar in the coming months if the Federal Reserve delivers back-to-back rate cuts amid growing signs of a US economic slowdown, Morgan Stanley strategists said.
The dollar-yen is detached from fair value now, and if that relationship returns, the cross is seen declining in the first quarter of 2026 as falling US yields may drive down the fair value, strategists including Matthew Hornbach wrote in a note dated Sunday.
"Japanese fiscal policy settings meanwhile are not especially expansionary," they said, and expect renewed downward pressure on the yen in the second half of next year as the US economy recovers, reviving demand for carry trades.
The bullish yen call comes despite the currency's recent weakness, driven by concerns that Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's spending plans will worsen Japan's fiscal health and by fading expectations of a near-term Bank of Japan rate hike. The yen has slumped 5.6% against the dollar this quarter, making it the worst performer among Group-of-10 currencies.
Morgan Stanley forecasts the dollar-yen pair to fall to around 140 in the first quarter of 2026, before rebounding to about 147 by year-end. The yen traded at 156.67 to the dollar at 11:51 a.m. Tokyo time.
With the yen hovering near the 157-per-dollar level, investors are increasingly weighing the risk of an official intervention in the market. Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama and other officials have recently expressed concerns over the currency's weakness, with Katayama specifically mentioning intervention as an option — though her comments so far have had only limited market impact.
Japan's growth minister Minoru Kiuchi said earlier Tuesday that the government is watching currency movements, including speculative activity, with a high sense of urgency.
On the rates side, Morgan Stanley expects Japan's sovereign yield curve to bull-steepen in the first quarter of 2026, driven by the US slowdown and easing fiscal concerns at home. The bank maintains recommendations for outright longs in 10-year Japanese government bonds, a yield curve steepener on 10- and 30-year JGBs, and a short position in 30-year JGB asset-swap spreads in the near term.
Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said she spoke with US President Donald Trump at his request, and that he briefed her on his phone call with Chinese President Xi Jinping and the latest state of US-China relations.
The two leaders reaffirmed the importance of close cooperation between the US and Japan, Takaichi said on Tuesday following her call with Trump, as a spat between Japan and China continues over her comments on Taiwan earlier this month. Takaichi was responding to a question from a reporter asking whether they discussed Taiwan.
"We've been able to further confirm the close relationship between the US and Japan following President Trump's recent Japan visit," Takaichi told reporters. "He told me I'm a very close friend and that I could call him any time."
The flurry of calls came as Japan and China continue to spar over Takaichi's comments on Nov. 7 where she said that if China fought to take control of Taiwan, it could be considered a "survival-threatening situation" for Japan, raising the theoretical possibility that Japan could deploy its military with other nations. So far the economic impact has been relatively limited, but China has advised its citizens to avoid traveling to Japan, and for students already there to exercise caution.
In a letter to the United Nations this week, Japan criticized an earlier missive from China as mis-representing the nature of remarks Takaichi made on Taiwan, saying Beijing's letter was "inconsistent with the facts and unsubstantiated."
"China's assertion that Japan would exercise the right of self-defense even in the absence of an armed attack is erroneous," Japanese Ambassador to the UN Kazuyuki Yamazaki wrote in a letter to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres dated Nov. 24.
Trump and Xi held their first talks on Monday since agreeing to a tariff truce last month, where they discussed trade, Taiwan and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The US president said he agreed to visit Beijing in April, and that he had invited Xi for a state visit next year. Takaichi also said Tuesday that she gave her thoughts on the US's efforts on achieving peace in Ukraine.
India's economy likely grew 7.3% in the July–September quarter, according to a Reuters poll of economists, underpinned by strong rural and government expenditure even as private capital spending remained subdued.
Household consumption, which accounts for roughly 60% of the economy, strengthened in the previous quarter as rural spending improved on better agricultural output. Urban demand and private investment continued to lag, suggesting uneven growth in Asia's third-largest economy.
Government spending, a key driver of growth in recent years, also likely persisted in Q2 of this fiscal year.
India remains one of the world's fastest-growing major economies in the face of U.S. President Donald Trump raising tariffs on Indian goods to 50% in August, a move that has contributed to foreign investors pulling out a net $16 billion from Indian equities so far this year.
Most economists say the deflator, used to strip out the effect of inflation to show "real" economic growth, was likely very low, making Asia's third-largest economy seem a bit stronger than it really is.
Indian gross domestic product (GDP) expanded 7.3% year-on-year in the July–September period, down from a better-than-expected 7.8% in the previous quarter, according to the median forecast from a Reuters poll of 61 economists conducted November 18–24. Estimates ranged from 6.0% to 8.5%.
"As far as the drivers of growth are concerned, private consumption and central government capex expenditure will remain the key supports for growth now, while private sector capex investment will likely grow at a slower pace due to the persisting global uncertainty," Kaushik Das, India chief economist at Deutsche Bank, said.
The data are due Friday, November 28 at 1030 GMT.
Economists are more cautious on the medium-term outlook, predicting GDP growth to slow to 6.8% this quarter and 6.3% in the quarter ending in March 2026.
A low deflator - which falls when inflation cools - also provided a boost to the latest data, as it did in the previous quarter, several economists said.
"GDP will benefit from a lower base and an exceptionally low deflator, which will artificially prop up real GDP growth ... But nominal GDP growth will likely continue to be weak," Deutsche Bank's Das said.
Wholesale price inflation was negligible and consumer inflation was on average around 2% between July–September.
Inflation has since fallen to less than half a percent.
"Inflation projections now for the rest of the year also remain soft," Rajni Thakur, chief economist at L&T Finance, said. "We really don't see this deflator support - which is statistically impacting real GDP numbers - going away till the end of this fiscal year."
Economic activity as measured by gross value added (GVA) was estimated to have expanded 7.15%. Nominal GDP growth, which is not adjusted for price changes, likely slowed to 8.3% last quarter from 8.8% previously, the poll predicted. Those are based on a smaller sample of forecasters.

Meanwhile, recent cuts to the consumption tax, part of a major overhaul of the national goods and services tax (GST) system and implemented from September 22, are expected to give some support to demand in the coming quarters.
"Unfortunately, GST cuts have come at a time when Indian households are already heavily indebted. That takes away part of the disposable income they could otherwise have saved from the tax reductions," said Dhiraj Nim, economist at ANZ.
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