Japan Tankan for June shows big manufacturers' sentiment at three-year high
Laurence Griffiths | Getty Images. When Trump walked away from the TPP, it set off a series of political recalculations across Asia which was about more than goods and services. · CNBC

Japan's Tankan report showed big manufacturers' sentiment beat expectations, with the index hitting a three-year high.

The Big Manufacturers Index for June came in higher than expected at +17, compared with a Reuters poll forecast for +15. That was up from +12 in the March survey.

The Big Manufacturers Index was expected to come in at +15 for September, above a Reuters forecast for +14.

The closely watched index, which can affect policy making, is a quarterly survey of Japanese businesses.

The dollar/yen (Exchange: JPY=) spiked as high as 112.38 after the data, before retreating to 112.27 at 8:26 a.m. HK/SIN. It was at 112.26 just before the release.

Kathy Matsui, chief Japan strategist at Goldman Sachs Japan, noted that the survey offered a very "real-time" read of corporate sentiment, which was running positively.

"The yen-dollar rate has been pretty stable over the last couple of months and generally speaking corporate profits are still running at record levels. So I think it's pretty much a feel good environment is what we're detecting in this latest read," she told CNBC's " Squawk Box " on Monday.

But she pointed to capital-expenditure plans as the item to watch ahead.

"We need to see if the capex plans — which typically are very strong in June, but end up being subsequently being revised downward, if those plans are actually going to hold up — because I think this is a pretty big focus in the market," she said. "We are pretty optimistic that the capex plans are going to hold up, but the track record would suggest that's not always the case."

Among other readings in the survey, the Small Manufacturers Index for June came in at +7, in line with expectations from a Reuters poll, while it was expected to come in at +6 for September, above a Reuters forecast for +2.

The June Big Non-Manufacturers Index came in at +23, in line with expectations.

Japan's big manufacturers expected the dollar to average at 108.31 yen for the 2017-18 fiscal year, compared with 108.43 in the March survey.

Others also were positive on the survey.

"The breakdown of the survey showed gains for firms across all sizes, and in service sector firms as well as manufacturers," said Rob Carnell, head of research for Asia at ING, in a note on Monday. "But it was manufacturers and in particular, large manufacturers, that showed the most pronounced gains. And this suggests that external trade is the prime driver for the gains.

Japan's trade balance, has been pushing erratically into positive ground in recent quarters and will likely nose further into surplus over the rest of the year."