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Japan manufacturers stay upbeat on chip demand, services hit by costs

By Thomson Reuters Jul 14, 2026 | 6:03 PM

By Satoshi Sugiyama

TOKYO, July 15 (Reuters) – Japanese manufacturers’ sentiment remained relatively upbeat in July, supported by solid semiconductor demand, while confidence among non-manufacturers fell as the Middle East conflict, a weak yen and rising ​interest rates pushed up costs, the latest Reuters Tankan survey showed.

The ‌monthly poll, a leading indicator of the Bank of Japan’s quarterly Tankan business survey, showed that the manufacturers’ sentiment index was unchanged at plus-13 in July from June.

Manufacturers reported a recovery in the semiconductor market, including in memory-related demand, as well as rapidly expanding orders ‌for ​products used in chip applications and AI servers. ⁠Orders for electronic components were ⁠also rising broadly.

“Order volumes and values are at levels we’ve never seen before, and we’re concerned about production capacity,” a manager at a precision machinery maker said.

The July survey, conducted from July 1 to July 10, received ​responses from 218 out of 511 firms polled. The indexes are calculated by subtracting the percentage of pessimistic responses from the percentage of optimistic ones, ⁠with positive figures indicating net optimism.

The non-manufacturers’ ⁠sentiment index fell to plus-25 from plus-32, weighed down by ​cost pressures and uncertainty over the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran.

“Although signs of a resolution ​to the Middle East issue are beginning to emerge, the situation ‌has not yet recovered,” a manager in the service sector said.

The BOJ’s Tankan survey released earlier this month showed the business mood hitting an eight-year high and corporate inflation expectations rising to record levels.

At the same time, the central ⁠bank signalled caution on inflation last week, saying the Iran war was likely to prompt more firms to raise prices later this year.

While the United States and Iran ⁠reached a tentative deal ‌to end the war in June, the truce remained ⁠fragile, with both sides exchanging missile strikes. Japan’s wholesale ​inflation spiked ‌to a three-year high of 6.3% in May, a ​sign companies were ⁠already passing on higher costs from the energy shock.

Looking ahead, manufacturers expect sentiment to be stable, with the index forecast to edge up to plus-14 in October. The non-manufacturers’ index is also expected to stay at plus-25 as business leaders assess the fallout from geopolitical risks and supply chain challenges.

(Reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama; ​Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)