Japan exports rose 11.7% y/y in March, beating forecasts, but a smaller trade surplus and rising import costs highlight growing risks from energy prices and supply disruptions.Summary:Exports +11.7% y/y, beat expectations, seventh straight gainImports +10.9% y/y, well above forecastsTrade surplus ¥667B, below expectationsStrong demand from China, modest US growthHigher prices supporting exportsEnergy costs and supply disruptions rising riskBoJ expected to hold but keep tightening biasJapan’s trade data for March showed exports continuing to expand at a solid pace, supported by firm global demand and higher prices, although underlying risks from rising energy costs and supply disruptions are beginning to build.Exports rose 11.7% year-on-year, beating expectations for an 11.0% increase and marking a seventh consecutive month of growth. The strength was broad-based, with shipments to China jumping 17.7%, while exports to the United States rose a more modest 3.4%.Imports also surprised to the upside, increasing 10.9% year-on-year compared with forecasts for a 7.1% gain. The stronger import growth, driven in part by higher energy costs, resulted in a smaller-than-expected trade surplus of ¥667 billion, well below expectations for a ¥1.1 trillion surplus.Despite ongoing disruption risks tied to tensions in the Middle East and constraints around the Strait of Hormuz, Japan’s export sector has remained resilient for now. Higher export prices have helped offset some of the logistical and supply chain challenges, allowing trade volumes to hold up in the near term.However, the outlook is becoming more complex. Rising energy prices are beginning to feed through into input costs, particularly for manufacturers reliant on imported oil and petrochemical feedstocks. Shortages of key materials such as naphtha have already forced some firms to halt orders, highlighting emerging strain beneath the headline strength in exports.Japan’s economy continues to show signs of a modest recovery, underpinned by business investment and external demand, but the momentum remains uneven. The combination of higher import costs and supply constraints poses a downside risk to both production and consumption in the months ahead.For policymakers, the data reinforces a delicate balancing act. While resilient exports support growth, the inflationary impact of higher energy prices and a weaker yen is adding pressure to the outlook. The Bank of Japan is widely expected to keep rates unchanged at its upcoming meeting, but maintain a tightening bias as it navigates the trade-off between sustaining growth and managing rising price pressures. This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.