How Octopuses Don't Tie Themselves in Knots Mystery Solved


octopus

Octopuses do not stick to themselves despite not knowing where their arms are.Sebastian Niedlich



The mystery of how octopuses manage not to get tangled up in their own tentacles has finally been solved.


Published in the journal Current Biology, researchers from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem noted it has long been known that octopuses do not know where their arms are exactly – so how then, they asked, do they not end up tying themselves up in knots?


"We were surprised that nobody before us had noticed this very robust and easy-to-detect phenomena," said researcher Guy Levy. "We were entirely surprised by the brilliant and simple solution of the octopus to this potentially very complicated problem."


Octopuses' arms are covered in suckers that will stick to pretty much anything. However, the octopus does not have accurate knowledge of where there arms are and what they are doing.


Octopus expert Binyamin Hochner said humans know where their limbs are because our rigid skeletons limit the number of possibilities.


"It is hard to envisage similar mechanisms to function in the octopus brain because it's very long and flexible arms have an infinite number of degrees of freedom. Therefore, using such maps would have been tremendously difficult for the octopus, and maybe even impossible."


To answer why octopuses do not end up sticking to themselves, the Hebrew University researchers observed the behaviour of octopuses that had an amputated arm – an arm that remains active for an hour after being separated from the body.


They noticed that the amputated arms never grabbed octopus skin, nor did they grab Petri dishes covered with octopus skin.


Findings showed that a chemical produced by octopus skin temporarily prevents their suckers from sucking, providing a self-avoidance mechanism.



Octopus Amputated to Discover Why they do not Stick to ThemselvesIBTimes UK



"The results so far show, and for the first time, that the skin of the octopus prevents octopus arms from attaching to each other or to themselves in a reflexive manner," the study said.


"The drastic reduction in the response to the skin crude extract suggests that a specific chemical signal in the skin mediates the inhibition of sucker grabbing."


Researchers also found that octopuses could override this automatic mechanism when they needed to.


The team believe the finding could result in bio-inspired robots or medical equipment such as a flexible surgical manipulator.


Study co-author Nir Nesher said: "This is especially advantageous in unfamiliar environments with many obstacles that can be bypassed only by flexible manipulators, such as the internal human body environment."



Zimbabwe Government to Deny Food Aid to 20,000 Displaced People who Refuse Forced Labour


Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has threatened to boycott the upcoming EU-Africa summit if his wife is denied a visa.

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's government has threatened to deny food to 3,000 displaced familiesReuters



At least 20,000 displaced people in Zimbabwe reportedly risk being denied food aid by the government, which is trying to force them to work in a sugar cane farm.


According to Human Rights Watch, the Zimbabwean army has relocated 3,000 families from the flooded Tokwe-Mukorsi dam basin, 72 km south of Masvingo Province, to Nuanetsi Ranch, a camp on a sugar cane farm.


The displaced people allege the floods were artificially induced so authorities could forcibly evict people and hire them as low-paid workers on the sugar cane farm.


The families were not consulted about their relocation site, as required by international standards, and are now being forced to live in the camp where they can only grow sugar cane for a living.


During the relocation, which occurred in February 2014, thousands of people lost household property and livestock. Thousands of children no longer have access to education.


"These 3,000 families have been displaced under questionable circumstances and dumped in a place where their only alternative is to be cheap labor for Zimbabwe's ruling party," said Tiseke Kasambala, southern Africa director at HRW.


"These families have a right to compensation for their property and to voluntary resettlement elsewhere in the country, to earn a living as they see fit."


Without access to a livelihood, the displaced people have been relying on food provided by international aid agencies, which is distributed by the government.


The minister for local government, Ignatious Chombo, has warned the displaced families to accept relocation, if they want food assistance.


"We should make it clear that food assistance will only be given to those families who agree to move to their permanent plots, because we need to decongest Chingwizi temporary camp," Chombo said.


Nuanetsi Ranch is severely overcrowded, with each family allocated a one-room tent regardless of the number of family members, HRW warned.


"The Zimbabwean government has an obligation to ensure that displaced people have food, clothing, and shelter," Kasambala said.


"But when food aid is turning up in local markets instead of in the tents of the displaced, then the responsible local officials need to be investigated."



Singapore Home Sales at Five-Month High Amid Declining Property Prices


Singapore Home Sales Strike Five-Month High Amid Declining Prices

A file photograph of a residential condominium project in Singapore.Reuters



Home sales in Singapore, Asia's second-most expensive housing market, struck a five-month high in April amid declining property prices, according to government data.


Home sales in April rose to 745 units, the highest since 1,271 in November 2013, according to data from Singapore's Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA).


Home sales jumped 55% over March 2014 but dropped 46% when compared to April 2013's figures, data showed on 15 May.


Realty firms managed to sell more than the 586 units marketed, as home buyers rushed to make bookings amid falling prices.


"It's an improvement as developers sold more units than they launched last month," said Nicholas Mak, an executive director at SLP International Property Consultants in Singapore.


"That's a good sign because it shows they are cutting their inventory of unsold units." Mak told Bloomberg.


Prices of private residential properties fell by 1.3% in the first three months of 2014, following a 0.9% dip in the preceding quarter, URA data showed on 25 April.


Rental Discrimination


Several landlords in Singapore refuse to rent homes to mainland Chinese and Indians and the so-called rental discrimination has reportedly become a rising menace in the small but wealthy city-state.


The issue appears more common with less expensive properties and on property rental sites where content is posted directly by users, the Online Citizen reported.


Singapore is an ethnically diverse nation, comprising 74% Chinese, 13% Malay, 9% Indian and 3% from other groups, according to official data.


Nine out of 10 Singaporean households own their homes, according to government data. As such, a sizeable chunk of renters are foreigners.


Most Expensive City


Singapore has become the most expensive city in the world to live in following rise in house prices after an influx of foreign workers boosted the island's wealth and demand for homes.


According to a February Economist Intelligence Unit report, entitled The Worldwide Cost of Living Survey, a strengthening of the Singaporean dollar also pushed the country to pole position as the expansion of the republic's financial industry contributed to the country's wealth.



Cryptocurrency Round-Up: The Darkcoin Rises; South Africa's Madibacoin and Bitcoin 2014 Begins


The Darkcoin Rises; eBay Talks Bitcoin Integration; South Africa's Madibacoin & Bitcoin 2014 kicks off

As Bitcoin 2014 kicks off, Darkcoin continues to rise in while eBay says it is "actively considering" bitcoin integration



What's happening on the cryptocurrency markets these days? Where is the wailing and gnashing of teeth at wild fluctuations in price and market capitalisation?


The last 72 hours have seen almost no change in the price of bitcoin - and by extension - most other cryptocurrencies.


Generally positive, the top four cryptocurrencies by market cap (bitcoin, litecoin, peercoin and dogecoin) all saw minimal rises of less than 1%, but it was darkcoin which broke the mould, seeing a huge increase of over 50% in the last 24 hours.




The Darkcoin Rises




In the last seven days, the market capitalisation of darkcoin has almost tripled, going from $6.9 million (£4.12) on 8 May to $18.3m today with the price of a single darkcoin mirroring this rise (going from $1.60 to $4.46).


This has led to some in the darkcoin community predicting what is known as a "pump and dump" - where speculators buy up a lot of the cryptocurrency in order to artificially inflate the price of a coin and make a fast profit by selling off the coins at a higher price before it tumbles again.


The huge spike in the value of darkcoin is not dissimilar to the rises we've seen from many other cryptocurrencies before it.


The difference with darkcoin is that it is genuinely trying to stand out from all the other altcoins out there, by promising an even more anonymous version of bitcoin.


Darkcoin's selling point is that it makes it possible for people to make transactions without the payment being seen in the public blockchain, using its DarkSend payment system.




eBay actively considering bitcoin integration




EBay's CEO, John Donahoe told the company's annual general meeting that his company was "actively considering" the integration of the world's biggest cryptocurrency into its payment platform PayPal:


"Exactly how that plays out, and how we can best take advantage of it and enable it with PayPal, that's something we're actively considering. It's on our radar screen," Donahoe said.


This is just the latest statement from Donahoe about allowing customers to buy goods on eBay with bitcoin, but it is certainly the most positive so far going much further than last year's "we're kind of thinking about it".


Last month the huge ecommerce business opened up a special 'virtual currency' section to its main US site, enabling users to buy and sell digital currencies like bitcoin, as well as mining contracts and mining equipment.


There is no indication of a timeline for when a bitcoin payment option could be implemented on eBay.




Bitcoin 2014 Begins




This week the bitcoin world will be turning its attention to Amsterdam as the Bitcoin 2014 conference kicks off.


Organised by the Bitcoin Foundation, Bitcoin 2014 will feature talks and workshops featuring some of the most important and influential players in the bitcoin and wider cryptocurrency world.


The conference is divided into four distinct categories:



  • The Digital Economy

  • Bitcoin Technology: Present and Future

  • Rules of the Game: The Legal Landscape

  • Enterprising in the Digital Age: Merchant and Consumer Services


The keynote speaker will be Patrick M. Byrne of Overstock.com, currently the biggest retailer accepting bitcoin. Among the speakers will also be Gavin Andresen who recently stepped down as bitcoin's lead developer but remains as its chief scientist.


Also attending are Bobby Lee of BTC China and Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire.


The conference will also host the first annual Blockchain Awards which aim to "celebrate innovation and excellence in the bitcoin community."




Madibacoin: The South African bitcoin inspired by Nelson Mandela




I thought we'd seen the launch of every single possible type of altcoin, but I was wrong.


Madibacoin is promising to be the first politically-inspired cryptocurrency. It looks to be trying to cash in on the popularity of late South African statesman Nelson Mandela.


Madiba was a term of endearment used by South Africans for the former president, and now a mobile marketing company in South Africa is ready to launch Madibacoin.


Mahala Mobile says that Madibacoin is "an alternate cryptocurrency which is based on the sound principles of Bitcoin."


While Madibacoin can't be exchanged for other cryptocurrencies or fiat currency (yet) you will be able to exchange it for airtime, which founder of Mahala Mobile says was the reason for creating the coins.


Mahala Mobile wants the coin to be mined by people using their PCs and laptops rather than the mining rigs which you now need to mine bitcoin.


To help people along, Mahala Mobile will be also selling USB ASIC mining rigs to customers which will cost around £11.50.


The cryptocurrency is set to launch soon.



Egypt's Sisi Begs US for Economic and Anti-Terrorism Aid


Abdel Fattah al-Sisi

Egypt's presidential candidate and former army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi(Reuters)



Egypt's president-in-waiting Abdel Fatah al-Sisi has called on the United States to help fight terrorism and provide economic support to bolster the prospects for democracy in the country.


Speaking to Reuters ahead of Egypt's presidential vote on 26 and 27 May, Sisi called for the US to resume military aid, which was previously worth $1.3bn (£775m, €951m) annually.


"We are fighting a war against terrorism," he told Reuters in his first media interview.


"The Egyptian army is undertaking major operations in the Sinai so it is not transformed into a base for terrorism that will threaten its neighbours and make Egypt unstable. If Egypt is unstable then the entire region is unstable," he added.


Washington partially resumed military aid to Egypt in April, after Congress cleared the way for the US to deliver Apache military helicopters to Egypt.


They deal had been on hold since the ouster of Islamist president Mohamed Morsi, Egypt's first elected leader, last summer.


"We need American support to fight terrorism, we need American equipment to use to combat terrorism," he told Reuters.


Sisi, who previously served as Hosni Mubarak's head of military intelligence, stepped down as head of the armed forces in April before announcing his candidacy for the Egyptian presidency.


He led the army to overthrow Morsi last summer and said he was forced to intervene after a massive uprising against Morsi's divisive rule.


"The more time passes the more the vision gets clearer to everyone. People and the world realise what happened in Egypt was the will of all of the Egyptian people," he told Reuters.


"The army could not have abandoned its people or there would have been a civil war and we don't know where that would have taken us. We understand the American position. We hope that they understand ours," he added.


The Muslim Brotherhood was labelled a terrorist group and outlawed in December, while Morsi faces capital charges. Hundreds of Brotherhood members and supporters have been sentenced to death.


Inherent Economic Issues


If Sisi prevails in the vote this month, he will inherit an economy on its knees.


Battered by years of political turmoil and hampered by massive state subsidies, Egypt has shed foreign currency reserves at an alarming rate while relying on foreign aid to remain afloat.


"We have to admit that the economic situation in Egypt is difficult, and not just over the last three years. Egyptians were aspiring to a more stable life than the reality we are living in. More than 50 percent of the Egyptian people suffer from poverty. There is a lot of unemployment," Sisi told Reuters.


Gulf countries Kuwait, the UAE and Saudi Arabia were quick to deliver aid to the Arab world's most populous country last summer, each sending billions of dollars for development projects.


Speaking on Thursday, the UAE's finance minister said there were no plans to send any more financial assistance to Egypt for now. While Sisi did not mention whether he would seek more aid from the Gulf, he said Egypt needed to become economically independent.


"We don't see this as a good thing, frankly, and hope it ends as soon as possible."


Sisi called on Washington to provide the economic backing required to foster a genuine democracy in the country. He said cooperation on the economy and education would help the country fight off terrorism in the long run and enable civil institutions to thrive.


"You want to create democracy in many countries. This is a good thing but it won't succeed in the way it is needed except through good economic support and proper support for education," he said.


"Are you ready to open your countries for us for more education that won't be expensive, to send the intelligent ones among our children to be educated in your countries, to see and learn. This is a way of developing and supporting democracy."


"We will send ... our best youths to go and see and learn and return to us with science and culture. We want the students who cannot pay to get an excellent education so they become the society's elite and can then lead it," he told Reuters.



UAE Says No Plans For More Egypt Aid


Abdel Fattah al-Sisi

Egypt's presidential candidate and former army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi(Reuters)



The United Arab Emirates' finance minister has said there are no plans to give Egypt any more financial aid for now.


The UAE has been one of the biggest financial backers to Egypt's interim government, which has lead the country since its first elected president Mohamed Morsi was ousted in a military-orchestrated coup last summer.


Responding to reporters' questions on whether the UAE was planning to give additional aid to the North African state, Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid al-Maktoum said "not for now."


Economic and political ties between Egypt and the UAE have strengthened since the Islamist Morsi was ousted as Egypt's head of state.


The UAE agreed a $4.9bn aid package with Egypt last October for a myriad of development projects, ranging from construction of schools, housing and silos to store wheat.


In March, the UAE state-linked firm Arabtec announced it had agreed a deal directly with the Egyptian army worth $40bn to construct a million new homes.


Egypt is due to hold presidential elections on May 26 and 27. Former head of the armed forces Abdel Fattah al-Sisi is widely expected to emerge victorious in the vote.


Egypt's new president will inherit a struggling economy, battered by three years of political turmoil and weighed down by massive state subsidies on energy and food products.



Criminals Launder $140bn Annually Through Sports Betting


Former Portsmouth player Sam Sodje

Criminals Launder $140bn Annually Through Sports Betting: Sam Sodje was secretly filmed admitting to match fixing.Reuters



Criminal gangs are betting on a range of sporting events to launder $140bn a year which, in turn, allows match-fixing scandals to spread.


According to the Qatar-based International Centre for Sport Security (ICSS), gangs mainly target football and cricket matches to launder cash but basketball, motor racing, and tennis games are also being used for financial crime.


"The rapid evolution of the global sports betting market has seen an increased risk of infiltration by organised crime and money laundering," said Chris Eaton, director of sport integrity at the ICSS, who was also the former head of security at FIFA.


The ICSS released a report, The Battlefield of Sports Integrity, which shows that illegal markets account for 80% of global sports betting.


Match Fixing Scandals


Gennaro Gattuso

Gennaro Gattuso spent 13 years at AC Milan and won the World Cup with Italy in 2006Reuters



Last month, angry Indian cricket supporters reportedly stoned the house of batsman Yuvraj Singh and accused him of match-fixing in the wake of their team's defeat to Sri Lanka in the World T20 final.


Meanwhile, a range of footballers are under investigation for fixing matches.


For example, the home of former AC Milan and Rangers midfielder Gennaro Gattuso was raided by police investigating match-fixing in Italy.


The 2006 World Cup winner is currently being investigated along with retired Milan and Lazio player Cristian Brocchi. Both are accused of being involved in a ring that fixed matches in Seria A and other Italian games towards the end of the 2010-11 season.


"The biggest challenge is another "sport" if you like. A sport, which has no rules, no umpires, no referees and no regulations. A sport generating hundreds of millions of illegal dollars – euros etc. A sport which is the single largest threat to every other sport in the world – match-fixing," said Mohammed Hanzab, President of the ICSS at the Sports Integrity Forum on 15 May.


"Match fixing thrives on a lack of core components which every athlete takes for granted. Components such as rules, regulations, ethical conduct and laws governing fairness and equity. Most sport manipulation is carried out by transnational organised criminals who exploit legitimate gambling and thrive on the lack of international regulations. Different countries have different regulations making it that much easier for match-fixers to operate.


"The problem is getting worse. The challenge for us, those combating match fixing, is that it is a problem that nobody owns."


The ICSS say that global governments are "partly responsible", however they will struggle because the problem crosses so many borders.


"Sport's governing bodies are [also] partly responsible but will also struggle with responsibility because the problem cuts across so many different sports. Betting regulators aren't responsible for fighting crime, but they are responsible for regulating the sports betting market," said Hanzab in his speech.


"Tackling this issue must be a united and cohesive international approach. If we do nothing, sport will come to be seen as an arena of corruption, greed, and anti-heroes."



Hot Shots Photos of the Day: Pope Balloon, Syria Missile, Buddha Birthday


A balloon flies past Pope Francis during his general audience in St Peter's Square at the Vatican

A balloon flies past Pope Francis during his general audience in St Peter's Square at the VaticanAFP



A sky lantern flies past a statue of Buddha during celebrations for Vesak (Buddha's birthday) at Borobudur temple in Magelang, Java, Indonesia

A sky lantern flies past a statue of Buddha during celebrations for Vesak (Buddha's birthday) at Borobudur temple in Magelang, Java, IndonesiaGetty



Buddhists walk around a temple to celebrate Vesak in Mojokerto, Indonesia

Buddhists walk around a temple to celebrate Vesak in Mojokerto, IndonesiaGetty



The rising moon is turned orange by smoke from wildfires as an emergency vehicle travels along a burned-out hillside near San Marcos, California

The rising moon is turned orange by smoke from wildfires as an emergency vehicle travels along a burned-out hillside near San Marcos, CaliforniaReuters



A couple dance in front of the Eiffel Tower in the early morning

A couple dance in front of the Eiffel Tower in the early morningAFP



A woman walks through a display of portraits which were made as part of the Inside Out art project by French artist JR in Shanghai

A woman walks through a display of portraits which were made as part of the Inside Out art project by French artist JR in ShanghaiReuters



Farmers lie on the ground with sticks as they pray for rain during the Manda Festival at a temple on the outskirts of Ranchi, India

Farmers lie on the ground with sticks as they pray for rain during the Manda Festival at a temple on the outskirts of Ranchi, IndiaAFP



LeBron James of the Miami Heat acknowledges the crowd's adulation after the Eastern Conference Semifinals of the 2014 NBA Playoffs against the Brooklyn Nets in Miami, Florida

LeBron James of the Miami Heat acknowledges the crowd's adulation after the Eastern Conference Semifinals of the 2014 NBA Playoffs against the Brooklyn Nets in Miami, FloridaGetty



North Korean leader Kim Jong Un inspects the Korean People's Army and Air Force Unit 447

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un inspects the Korean People's Army and Air Force Unit 447Reuters



The Queen studies the programme at the Royal Windsor Horse Show

The Queen studies the programme at the Royal Windsor Horse ShowGetty



An illegal structure is demolished in the West Bank Jewish settler outpost of Maale Rehavam, near Bethlehem

An illegal structure is demolished in the West Bank Jewish settler outpost of Maale Rehavam, near BethlehemReuters



A missile is fired by Free Syrian Army fighters towards forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad in the eastern Hama countryside

A missile is fired by Free Syrian Army fighters towards forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad in the eastern Hama countrysideReuters



Emergency workers help rescue a boy stuck under the rubble following a bombing on the northern Syrian city of Aleppo

Emergency workers help rescue a boy stuck under the rubble following a bombing on the northern Syrian city of AleppoAFP



A miner is carried out after searching for co-workers after an explosion and fire in a coal mine in Turkey

A miner is carried out after searching for co-workers after an explosion and fire in a coal mine in TurkeyAFP



A woman shouts during a vigil in Abuja calling for the release of Nigerian schoolgirls abducted by Boko Haram in the remote village of Chibok

A woman shouts during a vigil in Abuja calling for the release of Nigerian schoolgirls abducted by Boko Haram in the remote village of ChibokReuters



An anti-government protester jokes with a military officer during a rally at an Air Force base in Bangkok

An anti-government protester jokes with a military officer during a rally at an Air Force base in BangkokReuters



Anti-government protesters cast shadows around the bloody footprint of a wounded person at the site of an attack at the Democracy Monument in Bangkok. Unidentified gunmen attacked anti-government protesters in Bangkok, killing two people

Anti-government protesters cast shadows around the bloody footprint of a wounded person at the site of an attack at the Democracy Monument in Bangkok. Unidentified gunmen attacked anti-government protesters in Bangkok, killing two peopleReuters



National guards take aim at anti-government protesters during a demonstration against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's government in Caracas

National guards take aim at anti-government protesters during a demonstration against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's government in CaracasReuters




More Than 20 Dead as Anti-China Riots Spread Across Vietnam


Vietnam anti-China protest

Workers wave Vietnamese national flags during an anti-China protest at a Chinese shoe factory in Vietnam's northern Thai Binh province(Reuters)



More than 20 people were killed when rioters attacked a steel plant overnight as anti-China violence spread from the south to the centre of Vietnam.


Five Vietnamese workers and 16 others described as Chinese were killed in the riots, according to Reuters who cited a doctor in Ha Tinh province.


"There were about a hundred people sent to the hospital last night. Many were Chinese. More are being sent to the hospital this morning," the doctor at Ha Tinh General Hospital told Reuters by phone.


The violence marks one of the darkest moments in Sino-Vietnamese relations for decades.


Local newspapers reported that hundreds of Chinese had fled Vietnam to neighbouring Cambodia or by plane.


Taiwanese media said rioters attacked a massive steel plant in Ha Tinh province, owned by the Taiwanese Formosa Plastics Group. It is set to be Southeast Asia's largest steel plant and will have a seaport and a 2.150 Megawatt power plant upon completion in 2020.


Taiwanese businesses are among the biggest casualties of the attacks as rioters have mistaken them for Chinese-owned companies.


An industry association said on Tuesday that Taiwanese companies with business in Vietnam had already lost billions of dollars since the dispute between China and Vietnam ignited earlier this month.


Taiwan's foreign ministry spokeswoman expressed ''serious concerns" to Vietnam over the safety of an estimated 40,000 Taiwanese business people in Vietnam. When the crisis recedes, Taiwan has asked the Vietnam government to "act responsibly by looking to compensate our business people," Anna Kao said.


20,000 Vietnamese rampaged in two industrial zones in the country on Tuesday, attacking what they thought were Chinese factories and setting them ablaze.


The dispute originated when China deployed a giant oil rig in a disputed area of the South China Sea at the start of the month, prompting both sides to send extra ships to the waters around the Paracel Islands.


It is rare for Vietnam's authorities to allow anti-Chinese anger to explode in public and some analysts take that as a worrying sign that the tensions could escalate.



Japan's First Quarter Growth at Over Two-Year High


Japan's first-quarter growth at over two-year high.

A file photograph of the Shibuya Shopping District in Tokyo.Reuters



The world's third-largest economy logged its fastest pace of growth in more than two years in the first-quarter of 2014, buoyed by robust consumer spending and strong business investment.


Gross domestic product in Japan rose at an annualised rate of 5.9% in the January-March first-quarter, government data showed on 15 May, as consumers and businesses rushed to make purchases before the national sales tax increased to 8% from 5%.


Japan GDP Growth

Japan's GDP growth.Cabinet Office, SG CAR/Economics



Economists polled by Reuters had forecast an annualised 4.2% growth rate for the first-quarter.


On a quarter-on-quarter basis, the Japanese economy expanded 1.5%, beating expectations and clocking its sixth straight quarter of expansion.


Private consumption, which accounts for some 60% of the economy, increased by 2.1% from the preceding quarter.


Capital spending rose 4.9% on the quarter, beating expectations of a 2.1% growth rate and logging its fastest expansion since the October-December fourth-quarter of 2011.


Companies invested higher profits in factories and equipment.


Q2 Growth Outlook


Societe Generale Cross Asset Research said in a note to clients: "Looking ahead, we anticipate that the strong growth of Japan in Q1 will be partially offset by negative growth in Q2 due to the subsequent decline in domestic demand after the consumption tax hike.


"However, the pay-back in Q2 is somewhat less of a worry as the recovery in capex in Q1 proved to be far stronger than we expected, and in light of prospects for the global economy, solid export growth looks likely."


Bill Adams, senior international economist for PNC Financial Services Group, said in a note: "...Since [first-quarter] growth will likely be given back in the second quarter, the market impact of Japan's strong GDP read will probably be limited.


"While the first-quarter's strong growth will likely give way to contraction in the second-quarter, recent positive sentiment surveys suggest that Japanese growth should continue above the pre-Abenomics trend when the volatility caused by the tax increase passes."


"Japan's imports continued to grow faster than exports in the first-quarter, as they have in each of the preceding two quarters. Abenomics has boosted Japanese import demand more than the weaker yen is boosting Japan's exports.


"In Japan, as in the US and [the] UK, quantitative easing is fueling stronger import demand and pulling the global economy forward," Adams added.