Archive for the ‘Japan Stocks’ Category

Japan’s, and one of the world’s largest, public pension funds, the Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) is set to revamp its conservative asset allocations away from bonds and fixed income into equities and alternatives like REITs (J-REITs in Japan). Some are calling this the biggest change in the history of the fund, which manages nearly ¥130 trillion ($1.26 trillion), while cynics dismiss the move as largely a symbolic step toward the more significant step of increasing the fund’s stock allocation.

The GPIF has also adopted new investment benchmarks, including the MSCI Japan, Russell Nomura Prime, and the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s new JPX-Nikkei 400, while dropping the all market, market cap-weighted Topix index of 1,700 listed shares. The JPX-Nikkei 400 universe is selected from the TSE 1, TSE 2, Mothers and JASDAQ exchanges, not just larger TSE 1-listed companies. The index also uses Return on Equity (ROE), market capitalization and a qualitative governance and disclosure ranking to select shares included (deleted) from the index. The GPIF’s selection of the index as a benchmark makes the JPX-Nikkei 400 the de facto benchmark, at least for domestic pension fund managers.

The Fed: Now Between a Rock and a Hard Place
The Fed’s eventual (and inevitable) attempt to withdraw unprecedented monetary stimulus and reduce its massively swollen balance sheet could well be the biggest market-moving event after the 2008 financial crisis. Right now, the Fed is buying $85 billion of bonds every month, indefinitely: $45 billion of U.S. Treasuries and $40 billion of mortgage-backed securities. Despite this, a vicious sell-off has gripped the Treasury market, sending bond yields soaring. If the mere mention of a potential withdrawal has this big of an impact on bond yields, what will happen when the central bank actually begins selling the securities it has accumulated? Investors would rather not find out. Thus the trillions of dollars worth of bonds accumulated on the Fed’s balance sheet over the past several years has put the central bank in a tricky spot. 
Hat Tip: CLSA
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke got the guessing game started on May 22 when he told a Congressional committee the Fed could begin to scale back QE “in the next few meetings.” Ostensibly, the Fed’s reason for initiating its tapering (balance sheet winding down) operation is their confidence in the US’s economy not only to sustain its recovery, but for economic growth to accelerate and job creation to recover to more “normal” levels. But private sector economists see the”the economy is now strong enough to stand it” explanation has having dubious credibility. If this is the real reason, they reason, the Fed will not begin tapering in September. Even the IMF believes the FED will continue to maintain large monthly bond purchases until at least the end of this year, and urged the central bank to carefully manage its exit plan to avoid disrupting financial markets. They warned that tapering, if handled badly “could have adverse global implications, including a reversal of capital flows to emerging markets and higher international financial market volatility.” 
But the real reason the Fed wants to begin tapering could well not have anything to do about unemployment, inflation or anything else directly related to the economy. The economy would have to advance at a 3.5% pace in the second half to hit the Fed’s forecast, and unemployment is still much higher than the Fed’s targeted 6.5%. It could be the Fed is taking to heart claims by its critics that its swollen balance sheet is causing serious disruptions in financial markets and is effectively reflating a bubble. A more technical reason could be a shortage of securities to buy if the Fed continues QE at its current pace. Or, Ben Bernanke is now leaving the Fed because QE is really no longer needed. Like chemotherapy, additional QE may do more harm than good,  as it is fairly obvious that QE alone will not fix the US’s problems. 

But when investors say that “the Fed is the only game in town”, they mean that, without the “all in” support of the Fed, US stocks, (until recently) bond yields, the S&P 500 VIX, etc. wouldn’t be where they are now, as is shown in the graph above.  But when even (as reported) a pizza shop owner decides not borrow that money for a new shop and a young executive decides to go to law school instead of get an MBA just because Ben Bernanke and the Fed changed their wording from “moderate” to “modest” when describing the economic recovery, Fed Watching has gotten out of control.Take away the QE punchbowl and price levels of financial assets become much more uncertain, ostensibly finding a new, lower level based on economic and corporate earnings fundamentals, and real interest rates instead of abundant, free money.  
Steeling for Increased Market Volatility
New rebound highs in the S&P 500 have come with a significant decline in the “fear factor”, i.e., market volatility. This complacency could well change, at least in the short term. People like BlackRock are now warning; 
a) Since 1896, September has historically been tricky for stocks, and the worst month of the year. 
b) Anxiety over Fed tapering is rising. 
c) “Europe could re-emerge as a source of volatility, with important German federal elections in September. 
d) The US Congress needs to pass a continuing budget resolution before the fiscal year ends on September 30th. This is likely to but the thorny budget debate back on the front page. 
The recent market movement suggests we could be in for another surge in the VIX as the S&P 500 digests the implications of the Fed taper. Last year, markets were spared the usual September volatility because the Fed with unexpected additional QE. This year, long bond yields are surging higher despite the apparent lack of economic strength.
How far this correction has to go before investors get comfortable with a tapering regime is anyone’s guess, but it is pretty clear its just starting. 
Hat Tip: Zero Hedge
The Fundamental Backdrop of US Stocks at New Highs
Claims that “its all about the Fed”, are not entirely true. U.S.corporate pretax profits are at historical highs, and, unlike the “profitless” IT bubble that popped in 2000, the last two surges in corporate profits were stronger than the rally in the S&P 500 and actually led stock prices as investors, punch drunk from the 2008 financial crisis, continued to doubt the recovery

Now however, we are seeing the second consecutive quarter of contraction in S&P500 revenues, while the critical operating margin has tumbled in the past two years to a level not since since mid-2010 (its now back down to 8.4%), and investors are beginning to wonder how much longer this profit surge can last. Despite three bouts of QE, the US economic recovery is still borderline, as yet unable to reach “escape velocity.” The fact is, U.S. GDP growth is slowing after the initial post financial crisis bounce. In 2010, GDP growth was +2.4%; in 2011, + 2.0%%; and for 2012, it is +1.7%. For the first half of 2013, on an annual basis, GDP growth slows further to +1.4%. These top-down GDP numbers are in direct contrast to the historically high corporate profit numbers. 
On the surface, the plunge in intra-stock correlations among the top 50 US market cap names in the past month is evidence that investors are focusing more on bottom-up fundamentals and beginning to ignore top-down influences such as Fed policy, market valuation, European growth trends, economic surprise indices and the like. This could be a big mistake.
The following chart shows the growing gap between operating margins and consensus recurring earnings margin, which is heavily influenced by Fed policy. This trend suggests that the quality of the new historical high in earnings is much less than stellar. Basically, the earnings improvement seen post 2008 financial crisis came from ditching full-time workers for part-time equivalents, refinancing corporate capital structures (de-leveraging) at lower cost of capital, and other restructuring.

Hat Tip: Zero Hedge, The Big Picture
The Cost of Corporate Prosperity: Loss of Jobs and the Middle Class
Japan’s financial crisis in the early 1990s cost the country two decades of malaise, decimated its banking sector from 17 “major” banks into basically three megabank groups, while the soaring JPY nearly destroyed all international competitiveness in Japan’s export sector, with the exception of automobiles. Japanese companies restructuring, trimmed full time workers and hoarded cash, and the experience caused a deeply engrained bunker mindset among Japan’s consumers as well as businesses. Similarly, the balance sheet restructuring, job cuts and hoarding of cash by US corporations that supported the recovery in aggregate corporate profits has also come at a significant cost, particularly among the 99% of the population that has to work for somebody. 
US employee compensation as a share of gross domestic income has plunged even as consumers continue to be the major support for the US economy, accounting for nearly 70% of US gross domestic product. High unemployment and falling wages mean it doesn’t feel like recovery for many, even though debt service payments to disposable personal income has dropped dramatically from 14% to less than 10.5% with falling interest rates, defaults and general household balance sheet restructuring. 
The 1% Hasn’t a Clue
Because they own most of the personal financial assets that have been goosed the most by the Fed’s enormous QE, the richest 7% of American households are doing very well, thank you. The 8 million with more than $836,000 in net worth–did quite well from 2009 to 2011. Their average net worth rose from $2.5 million to $3.2 million, a 28% jump. The other 93% however, lost out, as their average net worth dropped from $140,000 to $134,000.
 

Further, the US civilian labor force participation rate has dropped to 63.3% (March 2013) from a high of 67.3% in 2000, matching levels last set in 1979. Real wages, a good indicator of living standards, turned negative in both 2011 and 2012, falling by about 0.5% a year. The nominal increase in labor productivity is coming because the “good” full-time jobs are being trimmed. The government’s Household Survey reported that the 753,000 increase in jobs since the beginning of the year consists of no fewer than 557,000 of these positions being only part-time. When poor people cannot earn a return on their savings or on their labor, they remain trapped in poverty. The number of food stamp participants has surged to the point there are now nearly 4 food stamp recipients for every manufacturing job in America. 
While much less of a tragedy than food stamp recipients, but also telling, is the record 21 million young adults are now living at home with their parents. The US is developing younger generation that is having trouble finding full-time work and developing the skills needed for the transition to more stable, higher-paying employment. The longer the situation persists, the more difficult making up lost ground and lost time becomes for them. Japan’s malaise has already generated a “lost generation” of younger workers, which is exacerbating the economic drag of a rapidly aging population. 
The chart below of US employment is beginning to look a lot like Japan, without the low reported unemployment rate. The good jobs have disappeared, leaving younger workers to become “freeters” like their Japanese counterparts, i.e., living at home where possible and doing whatever part time work they can find. 
Source: John Mauldin
Source: Zero Hedge
Fiscal Rot
With good jobs disappearing and the middle class under siege, is it any wonder that in 2011, among the four U.S. cities with the highest unemployment rates i.e., Stockton, California(20.2%), Detroit, Michigan(20.0%), Flint, Michigan(19.0%) and San Bernardino, California (17.8%), only one of these cities is still bankruptcy free? 
What all of this means of course is that, like Japan’s 20-year malaise, the Great Recession of 2008 has left deep scars in the US economy that could take decades to mend. Nalewaik, a Federal Reserve researcher, investigates economic growth, and discovers slowing economies reach stall speeds. Since 1947, a sub +2% GDP growth, year-over-year, as an economic expansion slows, always correctly predicts an economic recession, which normally becomes evident, 70% of the time, within the next year.
This silver lining of this rather dark cloud is that, despite the Fed’s current consideration of tapering, structurally weak US economic fundamentals could well keep US monetary policy much weaker for much longer than the Fed would like, which is somewhat good if what is really spooking investors now is taper talk. 

Head Fake? Capital Flows Return to Europe

Capital flows through three channels, i.e., M&A, US money markets rebuilding their exposure to European bank paper, and fund managers boosting exposure to Euro bonds and stocks, have recently generally favored Europe. The once steady stream of Euroland economic news has abated, with the July indicator of manufacturing activity actually up-ticking, and European officials being quick to make optimistic pronouncements. Whereas the euro and the eurozone were under threat just nine months ago, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy recently declared, “this isn’t the case anymore.” Some recent Eurozone data points.
  • The number of people without jobs in Europe fell for the first time in more than two years in June, but the overall unemployment rate of 12.1 percent is still a record high.
  • Financial conditions over the past nine months following the pledge by Mario Draghi, head of the European Central Bank, to do “whatever it takes” to save the single currency
  • Euro zone inflation will ease in the coming months after price pressures fell further from the three-year lows hit in May. 
  • Economic sentiment is improving, as business climate indicators in EU continued an upward trend in July 2013. 
BlackRock however notes that Euroland could re-emerges a source of volatility over the next couple of months, PIMCO’s Mohamed El-Erian also warns “If officials do not return quickly to addressing economic challenges in a more comprehensive manner, the current calm may give way to renewed turmoil,” as,
1) Joblessness continues to spread,
2) Adjustment (austerity) fatigue is widespread and becoming more acute,
3) Bailout fatigue is apparent, and
4) Little “oxygen” is flowing to the private sector, as corporate credit remains severely restricted and could get worse as regulators force banks to delever their balance sheets. 
The “canary in the coal mine” index to watch of course is the Eurostoxx Banks index, which remains the most sensitive to “risk-off” waves, and whose upward trajectory remains very much dependent on a healthy and vibrant US banking sector stock trend. In addition, it is not widely reported that most of the Fed’s US liquidity since the crisis has actually been funneled through foreign (mainly European) banks with operations in the US; i.e., the Fed has been propping up the Eurozone banks as much if not more than the ECB. 
But without getting into the endless details and nuances of the Eurozone, the two Eurostoxx charts below are suggesting there is more upside to the Eurozone story. Indeed, the Eurostoxx Banks index has recently broken to the upside after seriously lagging the rally in US bank stocks. 
Source: 4-Traders.com

Much of the issue with Eurozone bank balance sheets of course was their exposure to the region’s sovereign debt. As is seen below, Italy and Spain, as well as other region soveriegn bond yields, have been in consistent decline since Mario Draghi’s promise to “do whatever it takes”, which as also taken the pressure off banks for further writedowns of sovereign debt holdings. 

Thus the general image of the Eurozone is that, while far from recovered and healthy, the financial sector and the Eurozone economy as a whole are slowly mending, thereby reducing the need for “priced for bankruptcy” discounts. So far, the cassandras insisting that a Greek exit and a break-up of the Euro was imminent were wrong, and the longer the system is held together, if even by duct tape and bailing wire, the higher its chances of surviving the Great Recession. 
Source: Bloomberg
Will China Continue to Surprise on the Upside or the Downside?
Many who were wildly bullish on China immediately after the 2008 financial crisis got their investment in Chinese stocks very wrong. After bouncing and recovering less than half of the 2008 financial crisis selloff, the Shanghai Composite has steadily eroded this bounce, and continues to delve the crisis low…despite a massive stimulus package that had foreign investors believing in 2009 that China’s “command and control” economy would be an engine pulling the world out of recession. 
Source: 4-Traders.com
Now with many foreign investors now bearish/cautious on China, contrarian investors are now suggesting that China is beginning to look interesting. But the heretofore high top line China GDP growth masked some serious imbalances and wasteful spending. Many foreign investors believe China has seriously fudged their economic numbers to present a too-rosy view. 
China’s export-led growth model worked well while it was a developing economy, but when you become the second-largest economy in the world, it becomes increasingly difficult for the rest of the world to absorb those imbalances. To offset faltering exports, Beijing uncorked monetary stimulus that triggered a lending and investment boom. China’s net exports fell to 2% of GDP, while investment surged from 43% to almost 50%. In propping up headline GDP growth with excessive investment infrastructure, housing, and factories that dramatically surpassed the needs of the end users, creating “ghost towns” of whole cities, fueling a huge housing bubble and creating serious excess production capacity.  Reflecting this overcapacity, one of China’s largest shipyards declared bankruptcy and another is asking for a government bailout. The solar sector has seen two big bankruptcies of the largest manufacturers in the world. There are similar pressures in steel and aluminum. 
Too much investment was based on the perception that the government is the guarantor of everything. Credit keeps growing in the banking system, but there is a dramatic increase of effective bad debt, through a “shadow” banking system. When the government tried to rein in shadow credit, it triggered a credit crisis. 

Even if consumption remained resilient in the midst of a collapse in investment, China’s GDP growth would still fall to 3%~4%, or well below the 6%~7% currently seen even by more cautious China watchers. Correcting these serious economic imbalances without serious disruption probably means lower GDP growth, perhaps even negative growth, implying financial instability, investment products and banks defaulting and loss of personal savings.

It is thus unlikely that China’s stock market will see the kind of surge the Shanghai Composite saw between 2005 and 2007 anytime soon, as China’s economic growth continues to wane, to a noticeably lower, much more sustainable growth curve, which means the “continued high growth as far as the eye can see” growth expectations that had been discounted in stock prices continues to be wrung out. Granted, there will continue to be short-term rallies from oversold levels, but we find it hard to make a strong case for a major secular rally in China stocks in the foreseeable future. 
Source: Trading Economics

Japan’s Abenomics: Mind the JPY/USD Gap!

As we have pointed out on numerous occasions, the rally in the Nikkei 225 and the weakness in JPY/USD are two sides of the same coin; i.e., there can be no sustainable Nikkei 225 at this point if JPY/USD is not depreciating as widely expected. 
As many investors are aware, Japan’s GDP numbers can be quite volatile and distorted. This is why many look to the IPI (industrial production index) as a better measure of economic activity. Japanese manufacturing activity expanded in June at the fastest pace in more than two years in a positive sign that domestic demand is picking up pace in the world’s third-largest economy. Japan’s services sector has grown for nine months straight, the longest ever in the series, but the pace of expansion faltered in July. The Markit Composite Output Index also fell to 50.7 in July compared to 52.3 in June. Survey .respondents voiced concerns regarding the impact of Abe’s three policy arrows and particularly the potential consequences of the increase in sales tax next April. Their uncertainty is understandable, as the last attempt to raise the VAT tax by the Hashimoto Administration pushed Japan into renewed recession.
Abe is currently walking a tightrope in deciding whether to go ahead with the proposed sales tax hikes, slated for April 2014, with his deputy prime minister Aso wanting to go ahead in lieu of promises made to fellow OECD members to take action to reign in Japan’s out-of-control government debt, and other advisors insisting that it is too early to introduce the tax. Businesses and consumers of course are against the tax, even though they recognize Japan needs to address its debt issue.
Profit Recovery Already Baked in the Cake?
The rapid weakening of the yen so far against the dollar is a boon to exporting company profits, but will likely hit the pocketbooks of ordinary households hard if salary levels–more or less frozen for the past several years–do not rise soon. Summer bonuses are up, but not dramatically so. The weaker yen is hurting electric power companies that have had to switch to LNG and thermal power plants, which is mainly imported. Other fuel costs for drivers as well as energy intensive industries are rising. 
Japanese earnings results for 2012, on aggregate slightly exceeded consensus expectations with pretax profits rising 9% while after-tax profits increased 23% YoY. Corporate earnings guidance for FY2013 (to March 2014) indicated pre-tax profit growth of 19%, with after-tax gains of 45% YoY. However, the guidance comes with two caveats, both of which offer scope for upward revisions. The caveats were, a) uncertain volatility bank trading profits, and b) exporter assumptions for foreign exchange rates. The media dian foreign exchange rates assumed by exporters in their earnings guidance are around JPY93/94/USD and JPY 120/EUR. 
Thus JPY/USD reversal so far (i.e., back to JPY96/USD) on the surface does’t threaten widespread exporter downward earnings revisions, but the problem is that stock prices discount currency fluctuations, especially JPY/USD in real time. Moreover, the correlation between JPY/USD and the Nikkei 225 has been particularly high since Abenomics triggered the sharp rally in stocks. 
Hat Tip: Zero Hedge
Thus the reversal in JPY/USD has had a directly negative impact on the Nikkei 225, which had reached the recovery point in terms of the chart pattern where rallies in the past have faltered. The more jitters about Fed tapering, the more the short JPY/long Nikkei 225 trade unwinds, pushing JPY stronger and causing a further selloff in the Nikkei 225. 
This is before any negative spillover from increased volatility in the Eurozone, or more bad news about China’s economy. Despite the recent uptick in China’s imports overall, Japan’s exports to China continue to decline. Yet while Japan’s balance of trade is now solidly in deficit, its current account balance continues to run a surplus supported by returns from overseas portfolio and direct investments, meaning there is still a net inflow of money into Japan from its external activities. 
Source: Trading Economics
With the interim correction already well underway in the Nikkei 225, we will just have to wait to see how far JPY/USD backs up, and with it, a further selloff in the Nikkei 225 goes before considering adding to new positions in Japanese stocks. 
Time to Deliver on the Abenomics Growth Strategy
After a quick, and surprisingly, fast start, executing Abe’s growth strategy, inclusive of the impending VAT hike (from 5% to 8%) next April, will present one Abe’s biggest tests to sustain the political and market momentum. Abe’s cabinet members and advisors (namely finance minister Taro Aso and Yale University economist Koichi Hamada) are add odds as to the timing of the tax hike.
To investors/strategists who say the April VAT hike is already priced in, a no-go (delay) counts as a “risk scenario,” Breaking what is supposed to be a two-stage rise into four or five steps under this scenario would ostensibly upset the expected revenue stream and push back a goal of achieving a primary surplus by fiscal 2020, which overseas economists generally see as a negative. Japan has made a big deal overseas of its commitment to getting its debt problem under control, and of course the IMF and other international organizations have been talking about Japan needing to raise the VAT for some time. Thus among mainstream economists, VAT hikes were part of the “Japan needs to…” narrative.
We take a different view, i.e., that the VAT hike risks throwing cold water on the “green shoots” of the domestic recovery because it is far from guaranteed with only one quarter of recovery that Japan’s economy is on a sustainable recovery path. Further, a year of solid growth would without the additional tax drag would very likely do much more for government revenues than the 3 percentage point VAT hike. 
When the tax increase was being drafted, companies urged policymakers to leave plenty of time between the rate changes, as businesses would likely shoulder significantly higher administrative costs if forced to make four or five adjustments instead of two. The general public, while generally recognizing the need for Japan to address its serious debt problem, would like to see some benefit from Abenomics before the tax hikes bite, as they are already looking at significantly higher cost of living increases like rising gasoline prices, higher utility costs and rising prices on everything from furniture (imported wood), paper. Prices are rising before incomes are and thus consumers are feeling the pain of the yen’s depreciation driven by “Abenomics” , and more than 70% of the public expects prices to be higher a year from now.
There are however some tentative, budding signs of trickle down. Income earned by households with an employed head of family grew 2% on a real basis in June, according to the Internal Affairs Ministry’s survey. Overtime pay and bonuses rose 6.3%, contributing to the income gain. Hourly wages are reportedly picking up for restaurant jobs and other positions. The consensus for April-June annualized GDP growth rate is 3.5%, which would be the highest number since the 2008 global financial crisis, and a sharp turnaround from a 0.9% decline three quarters ago. However, Japan’s economy also swung from -1.8% growth in Q2 2011 to 2.5% growth in Q4, and GDP numbers can be very volatile.

It is interesting to note that, while the JPY/USD reversal would ostensibly be most negative for export-oriented companies, the sector that have seen the most profit-taking are air transportation, broker/dealers, trading houses, banking and real estate, i.e., generally domestic reflation plays. The gainers on the other hand were the late-coming sectors, including land transportation, oil/coal and particularly services. Despite the continued bad news about the TEPCO Fukushima Daiichi fiasco, the electric power and gas utilities stocks are holding up because of price hikes. 


Sources: Tokyo Stock Exchange, Japan Investor
By investor type, the culprits behind the profit-taking are individual investors, brokers trading their prop positions and foriegn institutions, with the former two taking their cue from foreign institutions. Domestic financial institutions have actually been picking stock during the selloff. 
Source: Tokyo Stock Exchange, Japan Investor
In the recently hot service sector, Softbank (9984) is a star, maintaining a 40%-plus YTD gain. As was seen in the Topix sector breakdown, individual Nikkei 225 constituents also show some pretty heavy profit taking on the real estate companies, including Tokyu (8815), Heiwa Fudosan (8803), Mitsubishi Estate (8802) and property proxies like Mitsubishi Warehouse (9301).  
Sources: Tokyo Stock Exchange, Japan Investor
Abenomics is apparently unfolding as predicted by Shinzo Abe himself. The LDP sweeps back into power in the December 16, 2012 Lower House elections, the newly installed Abe Cabinet outlines a “three arrow” scenario, chooses a new BoJ governor that is not afraid to try aggressive policies, and who immediately uncorks the boldest BoJ actions perhaps in the Bank’s history, the LDP cements its majority with another landslide win in the Upper House elections in July 17, 2013, and the Abe Administration is now tackling an inevitable hard-wired VAT hike, amidst evidence that Abenomics is beginning to change inflationary expectations as well as economic growth expectations. 
As surprised foreign investors/traders digested the implications of Abenomics and an extremely aggressive BoJ, the narrative was that these actions would dramatically weaken JPY, especially as it appeared Japan’s balance of payments had now turned to structural deficit after some 40 years of chronic surpluses.
Source: 4-Traders.com
But the selloff in JPY vs USD appears to have lost essentially all of its momentum after quickly retracing some 56% of the appreciation from a 2007 low of around JPY124/USD to the JPY76/USD level immediately after the 2011 Tohoku earthquake/tsunami/nuclear disaster. JPY/USD is now languishing below the psychologically important JPY100/USD, and has reversed only 56% of the 2008 financial crisis appreciation. Even the LDP landslide election win in the July 2013 Upper House elections barely moved the needle. 
Bulk of Investment Fund Flows Remain Inward, Not Outward 
At first, there were expectations of a rush of funds from domestic institutions into foreign bond markets. That is not happening to a significant extent. The corollary expectation was that domestic institutions would shift portfolios from JGBs to equities. That has not happened to a significant extent either.
Source: Ministry of Finance

Meanwhile, foreign investors continue to pile into Japanese equities at a record pace, a pace that surpasses even the huge inflows seen between 2003~2007 with the Koizumi reforms, although the peak in these purchases has already passed, and European investors have already begun to take some profits.

Source: Ministry of Finance

Even a More Aggressive BoJ Policy Cannot Compete with the Fed’s Debt Monetization 
Even though the BoJ’s QE in terms relative to Japan’s economy is some 3X as large as the Fed’s “unlimited” QE, the liquidity overflow into foreign markets is much more limited, partially because JPY is not as widely accepted in global trade and financial instrument settlements, or even central bank foreign currency assets. Thus while the BoJ’s asset purchases are unprecedented for Japan, they pale in comparison to the sheer size of the Fed’s USD85 billion per month asset purchases that has the Fed already owning over 30% of the US treasury market.

Under more “normal” circumstances, the main driver of USD/JPY exchange rates is the yield differential between US and Japanese bond yields, such as the 2-year and the 10-year yield spread. Historically, USD/JPY has been more sensitive to the 2-year US-Japan bond yield spread, but since the Fed and the BoJ have their boots firmly on the shorter end of the curve, USD/JPY has recently disconnected from the spread differential on the shorter end of the curve. And while the 10yr spread has widened, it is still not enough to really push yield-hungry domestic institutions into foreign bonds, considering the forex risk. The last time USD/JPY was at JPY120 or weaker, the spreads were more like 250~350 bps.

Source: Amsus, Nikkei
Source: Amsus, Nikkei
Thus, as long as the Fed still has to carefully negotiate tapering to avoid upsetting the market recovery applecart, US bond yields remain anchored at levels that are insufficient to really drive a weaker JPY, regardless of how aggressively the BoJ pushes on their string. 
Ongoing Uncertainty About the Third (and Fourth) Arrows of Abenomics 
Initially, foreign media at least saw it as crucial that Abe pushes ahead with plans to raise a controversial consumption tax, from 5% to 8% in 2014…the major assumption being that Japan’s economy would be in a sustaintable recovery path by then. Ostensibly, the July election means “all systems go” for Abenomics, as the ruling coalition (LDP and Komeito) now has a majority in both houses of parliament. But while the Finance Ministry and its head spokesman, Taro Aso, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, would like to commit to the tax increase as soon as possible, Abe and his advisors are more cautious, wanting to make sure the recovery has roots before implementing a tax hike that could deep six any consumption recovery. 
Secondly, investors and businesses, while liking what they see so far about Abenomics, are still unsure whether Abe will seize the opportunity to transform the world’s third largest economy, or defaults (because of various barriers within and without his own party), to the same path as predecessors, and reform efforts fizzle. The history of Japan’s reform efforts is riddled with false starts and failures, whereas the Abe Administration brings a consistency of fiscal and monetary policy in Japanese politics not seen in the modern era. Even the reformer Junichiro Koizumi (2003~2005) did not have as supportive a central bank as Abe apparently has, whereas the Koizumi Administration did enjoy a booming global economy for Japan to lever off of. 
As far as domestic investors and businesses are concerned, Japan’s economy is only beginning to show green shoots of recovery, and while there is hope that Abenomics will revive the economy, most domestic institutions and companies would like to see solid evidence that the recovery has taken root before the government rushes to raise taxes. This is because, at least in recent history, Japan’s economy has only managed to put in a couple or maximum four quarters before again sputtering. 
Consequently, there is still insufficient evidence of a) a sustainably strong US recovery, b) positive bond yield rises, i.e., because of rising demand and not fear of tapering, and c) an expanding US-Japan bond yield spread to drive a significantly weaker JPY/USD rate. 
There’s Even a Not Zero Probability of Renewed Selloff
If the Fed bumbles its tapering strategy, we could see a sharp short-term run-up in US bond yields and significantly higher volatility in the US equity and bond markets, which of course would negatively impact global markets, including Japan. Despite the sharp selloff from a rebound high in May, the Nikkei remains the best-performing equity market YTD and thus represents a potential source of liquidity should high volatility and profit-taking hit global markets, ostensibly triggered by a US selloff. Even without a bungled US montary tapering, the Nikkei could be blind-sided by a renewed run-up in JPY given that Japanese stock prices remain extremely sensitive to currency movement.
As is shown in the chart below, the bears that shorted the Nikkei in May made a quick buck, while the Nikkei is still susceptible to profit taking, as it is bumping up against what is a 20-year resistance line, as pointed out by Chris Kimble of Kimble Charting Solutions. Thus if you still are a buyer of Abenomics, you nevertheless need to be prepared for some market volatility and even some selling. 
Source: Yahoo.com

<!–[if !mso]>st1\:*{behavior:url(#ieooui) } <![endif]–>While merely recognizing a secular trend that has been in place since mid-2011, we believe that allocations in emerging markets including China, commodities and fixed income (bonds) should be reduced in favor of a) US equities and b) Japanese equities. This is not your plain vanilla envelope global recovery.

US equities continue to surprise and confound the structural bears who got the 2008 financial crisis right. This is because the factors driving the recovery in US equities is more than just massive monetary stimulus; it includes a) a major shift from deflation to reflation, b) a structural recovery in housing and c) an historic shift from the US as a major importer of energy to a major exporter of energy.

Outside the US, Japanese equities are looking like the best horse in the glue factory. Japan has already survived its financial crisis, a global crisis, a natural crisis (a magnitude 9 earthquake) and 20 years of malaise that have wrung any hint of growth expectations out of stock prices. Without a catalyst, Japanese equities are merely a value trap. With a signficant catalyst (i.e., Abenomics), there is the potential for at least as large a rally as the Koizumi Boom (2003~2007). 

Dashed Investor Hopes of Performance from Emerging Markets
In January 2009, the BoA Merrill Lynch survey of over 200 global portfolio managers managing nearly USD600 billion indicated only 7% of investors were overweight the US market, while only 7% were underweight the emerging markets, up from 17% the prior month. Investor gloom caused by the financial crisis was already beginning to lift, even though global stock markets hadn’t bottomed yet (they bottomed that March), some 42% of those surveyed were still overweight cash, and China remained the big global growth wildcard; despite the announcement of a huge fiscal stimulus package. Indeed, the survey’s growth expectations indicator jumped to 30 from a low of 17 in October 2008, and 35% of those survey believed long-term rates were poised to rise in the next 12 months—read; “time to put on more risk”. In other words, global investors (mistakenly) believed in 2009 that it was the emerging markets that a) would dodge most of the sub-prime debacle bullets and b) pull the global economy out of its tailspin.

This uptick in growth expectations helped the MSCI emerging markets index (EEM), which had fallen faster and farther than the S&P 500, bounce back stronger and outperform the S&P 500 through mid-2011. 

Source: Yahoo.com
<!–[if !mso]>st1\:*{behavior:url(#ieooui) } <![endif]–>By June 2012, however, global investors had given up on emerging markets, with the BofA Merrill Lynch survey showing global fund managers slashing their position by half to 17%, the lowest level since October 2011, and considerably below the long-term average of 26%. Thereafter, emerging market performance has steadily deteriorated, recently hitting another low.

Rapidly Deteriorating China Growth Expectations

In 2009, few economists/investors were willing to be quoted in print of the possibility of a serious slowdown in China growth. Firstly, the Chinese economy for 10 years in a row (2001 to 2010) had consistently outperformed expectations, often by a big margin. Secondly, China had just unleashed a RMB 4 trillion (USD586 billion) 2008-2009 stimulus plan, and thirdly, it was widely speculated that at least 7%~8% GDP growth was required to maintain social cohesion. Now, the prospects for China’s economy look so challenging for the remainder of 2013 that increasing numbers of usually cheerleading investment bank economists are cutting their rosy growth forecast.

And the bad news just keeps on a’comin. China’s June trade exports indicated the worst YoY export performance since October 2009. The 3.1% drop (compared to expectations of a 3.7% gain) is the biggest miss in a year and the first negative print since January 2012. Behind the second consecutive miss is a recessionary Europe and slow Emerging Markets, as well as ‘fake’ trade data driven by the shadow-banking-arbitrage unwinding out of the historical data.

Rapidly waning growth expectations and continued, if as yet unsuccessful, efforts to reign in a property market bubble have taken their toll on Chinese stock prices. The Shanghai Composite quickly peaked during the first recovery wave in global stock prices in mid-2009, and has subsequently collapsed nearly 50%. Since late 2012, the Shanghai Composite and the S&P 500 have gone their separate ways, and anyone buying China as a leveraged play on a US stock market recovery has gotten their face ripped off. Once the darling of global fund managers, China stocks have now become what Japanese equities were in Q2 2012, i.e., bad news.

Source: BigCharts.com
<!–[if !mso]>st1\:*{behavior:url(#ieooui) } <![endif]–>The China Question Now a Major Drag on Global Commodity Prices

For many years, China was a black hole for imports of basic materials and industrial commodities. Not any more. Copper imports fell 20% in H1 2013 compared to H1 2012, which helped to create another huge miss in China imports data overall (-0.7% vs expectations of a 6.0% jump). It is no surprise , given the sheer size of these misses, that China Customs officials have stated, “the country faces serious challenges in exports and imports.”

As a result, copper prices peaked with the Shanghai Composite in early 2011, and continue to break down as the Shanghai Composite breaks down. Potentially, copper prices have a lot farther to fall, and we for one are in no mood to try to catch this falling knife. 

Source: 4-Traders.com
China Story Goes from Major Driver to Major Discount Factor for Japan’s Exporters

Given the sharp drop-off in US and Eurozone exports after the crisis, Japanese companies were betting that China demand would shore up failing exports; and for a while, they did. But the first signs of waning China demand sent Japan’s China-related stocks plunging. Major construction equipment manufacturer Komatsu (BigCharts, JP:6301) was a bellwether. After plunging under JPY800 during the selloff, Komatsu’s stock surged 275% to a 2011 high, then almost as fast sold off over 50%. 

 
Source: BigCharts.com
Foreign investors had already been steadily losing patience in Japan in the aftermath of the Koizumi Boom of 2003~2007. By 2012, they had become almost totally despondent and had almost totally given up on any meaningful change for the better. Japan’s economy was hit harder by the 2008 financial crisis even though its financial system largely dodged the toxic sub-prime bullet, as the financial crisis was compounded by a massive Great East Japan earthquake, tsunami and nuclear plant crisis.

While foreign investors at first took Rahm Emanuel’s quote of “never let a serious crisis go to waste” as an opportunity for Japan to implement some serious restructuring following the disaster, the newly-elected Democratic Party of Japan pretty much botched it. There was serious political gridlock (fiddling) while it appeared Japan’s economy (Rome) was burning. The sovereign debt crisis in the Eurozone added a renewed sense of urgency to Japan’s government debt problems, but Japanese politicians could barely agree on where the bathroom was, let alone implement any meaningful policies to address Japan’s problems. Japan’s alarming increase in government debt in the face of a rapidly aging population was a main underpinning for the “bug in search of a windshield” narrative.

Until Abenomics burst on the scene in Q4 2012, Japanese equities were on the same trajectory as the Shanghai Composite, i.e., rapidly going to hell in a hand basket. 

 
Source: BigCharts.com
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Prerequisites for Continued Nikkei Rally
While already surging some 80% from lows in mid-212, Japan’s Nikkei 225 has yet to catch up to the move seen in the S&P 500 from 2009 lows. Hindering a complete catch-up are lingering apocalyptic visions of; a) a fiscal crisis still being promoted by the “bug in search of a windshield” crowd, who despite being dead wrong all these years are as vociferous as ever, and b) Japan’s still significant but now falling dependence on China for export demand, and less than 100% confidence that Haruhiko Kuroda and the Bank of Japan can actually pull it off.

For Japanese equities to continue rallying, they need, a) continued JPY weakness, b) benign JGB yields, c) solid evidence of structural change/reform as in signs of improved GDP growth potential, d) growing confidence among Japan’s consumers and businesses that “yes they can” turn this thing around.

We believe the focus on JPY/USD is misguided, as the more accurate determinant of Japan’s export competitiveness is real effective exchange rates. As is clearly shown in the following chart, the change in Japan’s real effective exchange rate (REER) has been much more dramatic than JPY/USD. In terms of the percentage move, REER has also quickly lost 30%, and is now lower than it has been at any time since 1982. 

 
Source: Bank of Japan
JGB Yields Have Stabilized
 
JGB prices rallied some 6% as stocks again sold off in 2011, but quickly lost some 4% as the BoJ began its “shock and awe” bond buying campaign. To many observers, this quick reversal was a sign that the BoJ did have control of the JGB market, and that its actions, rather than calming JGB yields, actually made them significantly more volatile.

This sharp backup from new historical lows below 0.40% yield was enough to trigger a round of profit-taking on the infamous “short JPY, long Nikkei 225” trade, as the “all in” hedge funds were already sitting on some pretty hefty gains from the trade.

As JGB yields stabilized and there emerged encouraging “green shoots” indicating Abenomics just might be stimulating growth, the fast money renewed its “short JPY, long Nikkei 225” trade, while slowing-moving foreign pension funds, etc. took the opportunity to load up on Japanese equities. 

 
Source: BarChart.com
 How Long Can This Foreign Buying Last?

We are often asked, how long can this foreign buying last? In the 9 months since Abenomics burst on the scene, foreign investors have been net buyers of Japanese equities by JPY10.52 trillion, while domestic institutions dumped a net JPY9.02 trillion. For the first six months of 2013, net foreign buying reached JPY8.32 trillion, which already exceeds the JPY8.21 trillion of net buying for all of 2003, the first year of the Koizumi boom (2003-2007). The JPY10.52 trillion of net foreign buying over the last 9 months already exceeds peak annual net foreign buying of JPY10.32 trillion in 2005.

However, foreign investors were cumulative net buyers during the Koizumi Boom of JPY37.14 trillion of Japanese equity, which means net foreign buying still has a ways to go if the Abenomics boom just approximates the ill-fated Koizumi boom. 

 
Foreign Ownership of Japanese Equities Could Rise Much Further

Moreover, given Japan’s extremely poor demographics and a net shrinkage in the country’s pension pool, foreign ownership of Japanese equities can only increase going forward, through a combination of net buying on their part, and continued net selling by domestic institutions. While foreign investor ownership of Japanese equities has never been higher at 28%, it is still well below the 40%-plus seen in the U.K. market.

A Slow-Burning Corporate Governance Revolution

Already owning 28%, foreign investors are driving a slow-burning corporate governance revolution, as domestic institutions increasingly come around to their foreign counterparts’ way of thinking, and again to actively vote their proxies (as they already are) in keeping with voting policies that are increasingly similar. As foreign ownership rises even further and, correspondingly, strategic and cross-holdings decline even further, Japanese management can no longer ignore pressure from shareholders, even though they may prefer to.

Thus the pressure to reform/re-invent Japan is now coming from the top-down (government policy perspective) and the bottom-up (individual corporate) perspective.

Investors are Dumping Inflation Hedges
The noticeable shift in sentiment suggests the market may be approaching a breaking point where investors give up on the notion that the economic recovery is accelerating and/or that inflationary pressures are rising.
Since global financial stability slowing continues to improve (as confirmed by recent IMF statements), what we are talking here is not another look into the abyss, but a reality check, where “excessive” investor expectations for growth and inflation are again squeezed out of market prices. While “acute” global financial stability risks have been reduced, the Eurozone has an ongoing debt and credit problem that is suffocating economic growth and thus corporate and bank balance sheet repair in the region remains spotty and uneven, leaving a sword of economic and financial stability hanging over the region. The following are some yellow flags that markets (investors) are beginning to “smell” deflation.
Yellow Flag 1: Investors dumped their holdings of TIPs (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities) last week following a weak auction of 5-year notes. Falling prices prompted a spike in yields on the TIPS, which ostensibly hedge against inflation. Traders observed that, “the rest of the TIPs market is having a mini implosion since the auction, as real yields on TIPs have jumped 8-10bps across the curve in what appears to be a ‘get me out’ trade. The spread between the yield on TIPS and the yield on plain vanilla Treasurys, or break-even rate, which dictates the rate of inflation necessary for TIPS to provide a better return, has been in free fall. Before the auction, the rate was at roughly 2.24%.
Yellow Flag 2: Commodity prices are selling off. While the financial media was focused on the first weakness then sharp selloff in gold, significant selling was also underway in other commodities more closely linked with the real economy. The CRB index has quickly sold off some 7.9% from a 2012 high and is still over 24% lower than its 2011 post-crisis high. Copper has recently sold off just under 14% and is 30% lower than its post-crisis high, while crude oil (Brent) has sold off over 11% and is also about 24% below its post-crisis high.
In the week ended April 9, investors unloaded the equivalent of about 20 million barrels of oil in U.S. petroleum contracts, according to the CFTC’s Commitments of Traders data. Bloomberg data indicate indicate hedge funds and other money managers cut their bullish bets on Brent to their lowest level in four months, while a separate survey by Bloomberg shows investors expecting US crude supplies to hit a 23-year high of over 390 mm/bbl.
Since bottoming in October 2012, inventory levels of copper have risen 190% in warehouses operated by the London Metals Exchange. That’s a huge and rapid increase, and it conveys a powerful message about the future for copper prices. We are seeing an even more rapid rise in inventory levels than when global demand collapsed in 2008, and it comes on just a small amount of drop in copper prices. 
Yellow Flag 3: Great rotation not. Despite all the talk of the “great rotation” from bonds to stocks, global bond yields have taken another leg downward, with the German 10yr bund recently falling 50bps to 1.25%, the 10yr US treasury dropping 38bps to 1.68% and of course Japan’s 10yr dropping 39bps to historical lows at 0.45%. Even Spain’s 10yr bond yield continues to decline, by a large 238bps to 4.64% from July 2012 highs. Falling bond yields of course are another hint of shrinking growth expectations and/or shrinking inflation expectations.
Yellow Flag 4: Emerging markets have been underperforming by a widening margin since late 2012, ostensibly because of softening economic data, weakening commodity prices and slowing capital flows.
The Gold Crash Whodunit
The $20 billion gold futures sale and concentrated selling of gold futures on the US COMEX on Friday and Monday has gold bugs shouting “conspiracy” as they smelled manipulative selling by a large hedge fund, bullion bank or even the Fed, behind the crash. The CFTC is scrutinizing whether gold prices are being manipulated, although they public state that the drop doesn’t necessarily mean “anything nefarious”. The CFTC said in March that it is looking at issues including whether the setting of prices for gold—and the smaller silver market — is transparent and if it is fixed.  Blackrock said it sawno visible central bank activity” although the reported sale of (USD400 mm) gold by Cyprus was supposedly one trigger for the selloff.
Selling of paper gold ETFs backed by real gold probably accelerated the move. This is because GLD shares are dumped at a quicker pace than gold’s own selloff, creating an excess supply of GLD shares, forcing GLD administrators to buy up this excess supply, and raising cash to do this by selling gold bullion. According to Zeal LLC, the recent “correction” in GLD’s holdings forced it to dump a staggering 169.8 tons (5.5 million ounces) of gold bullion simply to keep GLD shares’ price tracking gold! There are only two gold-mining companies in the entire world (Barrick and Newmont) that produce that much gold in a whole year. The drop capped a trend of declining global gold investment (including bars, coins and ETPs), as the World Gold Council saw an 8.3% drop to 424.7 tons in 4th QTR 2012.
George Soros and Louis Moore Bacon reportedly cut their stakes in gold ETF products last quarter, for Soros by 55% as of December 2012. Once heavily long gold, hedge funds reportedly cut bets on a gold rally by 56% since the yellow metal reached a 13-month high last October. As hedge funds headed for the exits, the investment banks turned bearish. SocGendeclared the gold era was over and set an end 2013 target of USD1,375, near the time that Citigroup declared the end was nigh for global oil demand growth (on substitution natural gas for oil combined with increasing fuel economy).
Goldman set a year end target of USD1,450 and said it could go lower, then nailed the selloff with  a “short gold” recommendation a week before gold really tanked. This selling came amidst a consensus among economists that economic growth would accelerate in the U.S. and China in the coming quarters, according to Bloomberg and other surveys.
Gold has Lost its Safe Haven Status?
Soros total the South China Morning Post, “Gold has disappointed the public”…”when the Euro was close to collapsing in the last year…gold was destroyed as a safe haven, proved to be unsafe…Gold is very volatile on a day-to-day basis with no trend on a longer-term basis.” While Soros was long gold big time until fairly recently, he called gold “the ultimate bubble” in February 2010, implying he would enjoy the momentum ride until the music stops.

It is puzzling that gold crashed just as the BoJ was unleashing its “shock and awe” monetary expansion that will double Japan’s monetary base from Y138tn or 29% of GDP at the end of 2012 to Y270tn or about 54% of GDP by the end of 2014. This compares to a US monetary base expansion of 6% GDP in mid-2008 to 19% of GDP by this March. The BoJ’s increase in balance sheet of Y5.2tn (US$54bn) per month in 2013 is the equivalent of annualised 13% of 2012 GDP, or roughly twice the Fed’s current balance sheet expansion, at annualized 6.5% of 2012 US GDP.
If the real reason for the gold crash ends up being “rogue” shorts by Goldman, Morgan Stanley or JPM, etc. traders swinging for the fences that eventually blows up in their face, we may have a more serious problem than realized.
Source: 4-Traders.com
Is the Recovery Bull Market Already Long in the Tooth?
Looking at every bull market in the US since 1871, the historical “average” bull market lasted 50 months, with a media gain of 123.8%. The range since 1970 however has been substantial, from 32 to 153 months in duration, and gains ranging from 56.6% to over 516%. There is of course no way of knowing whether this bull market will be a short one or a long one, but coming out of the 1930s depression, there were no less than four bull markets ranging from 140% to 413% gains. For our money, this bull market is reaching a historical median milestone has no particular significance. 

Hat Tip: Big Picture

Economic Surprise Index Turns Negative 
In addition to the disappearing inflation premium in TIPs, we believe the negative turn in Citigroup’s Economic Surprise Index is having an impact…i.e., investor expectations were overshooting what it now appears the recovery is able to deliver. This is a marked contrast from the June 2012 to November 2012 period, when investor expectations were low and the economic data was surprising on the upside despite investor concern about the Eurozone and the US budget impasse. Given that US sequestration has kicked in, know one should really be surprised that the US economic data is looking “squishy”. 
The March US jobs report (which came in at just 88K) was an example of disappointing weakness, accompanied by some weak U.S. housing and retail data. Building permits have declined since January. Single family starts were down 4.8%. Homebuilder confidence, which climbed to its highest level (47) since 2006 in December, stalled in January 2013 after an eight-month rise and fell to 42 in April. Foreclosure starts have also begun to pick up again.
Source: Citigroup

The IMF Lowers its (Too Optimistic) Global Growth Forecast 

The IMF lowered its 2013 global growth forecast, to 3.3% from 3.5% and its 2014 forecast to 4.0% from 4.1%, reflecting, 
a) Sharp fiscal spending cuts in the U.S. (sequestration, etc.) should shave about 0.3 percentage points from US GDP this year, 
b) Struggling, recession-striken Europe, with economic contractions in France, Spain and Italy expected this year. 
c) With the IMF was upbeat on China, mediocre growth here is sparking concerns that growth is slowing. 
d) The good news was that the IMF raised its forecast for Japan, ostensibly on the BoJ’s aggressive new monetary stimulus. 
To IMF cynics, these downward revisions haven’t gone far enough, particularly as regards expected inflation. 
US Commerce Board Suggests US Economy Has “Lost Some Steam” 
The economy “has lost some steam” and will grow slowly in the near term, the Conference Board said Thursday as it reported that its leading economic index ticked down in March. The LEI declined 0.1% last month, following three months of gains, and economists polled by MarketWatch had expected the index to rise 0.2% in March. In February, the LEI rose 0.5%. The largest negative contribution came from consumers’ expectations. Other negative contributions came from building permits, a manufacturing new-orders index, weekly manufacturing hours and weekly jobless claims. 
Goldman Sachs’ Business Cycle Indicator Goes from Bad to Worse 
The latest Goldman GLI (global leading indicator) shows that the situation has gone from bad to worse. Consumer confidence, global PMIs, and industrial metals have all worsened significantly, pushing the Global Leading Indicator momentum down. Goldman’s GLI also points to future deterioration in global industrial production. 
Hat Tip: Zero Hedge

The Spring Equities Swoon Revisited 

The disconnect was that while the economic data flow was increasingly falling below expectations, bond yields were falling not rising, the TIPs inflation premium was shrinking, and commodities were selling off, the S&P 500 was blithely ignoring this in hitting a new rebound high.

Over the past several years, investors have repeated a pattern of beginning the year with optimistic U.S. growth/recovery expectations, only for these expectations to evaporate by mid-year as waning data suggest sluggish activity, which has contributed to a “sell in April-May” and go away pattern in stock prices as investors fretted about a) a possible end to QE, b) sputtering economic growth and c) ongoing Eurozone crisis. 
Yet, in “selling in May and going away”, investors would have missed most of the next up-leg that took the S&P 500 to new recovery highs, with the entire move from the March 2009 low of 683.38 now representing a 132% gain over a period of just over four years. This time, the correction could be essentially the same, i.e., basically a reality check that does not seriously endanger the post great recession, QE fueled market recovery. While the apocalyptic bears are still out there, their hyperbole is somehow less believable than in 2011 or 2012.
Source: Yahoo.com, JapanInvestor
Short-Term Breakdown in S&P 500 
In addition to the yellow flags previously mentioned, cracks are forming in the S&P 500 rally itself. 
The S&P 500 index is recently unable to close back above its 50-day moving average. This is the first close below this key price level in 2013 as high-beta Tech (AAPL) and Homebuilders underperformed notably. Stocks are below Cyprus levels and marginally above Italian election levels. 
Hat Tip: Zero Hedge
The Trend is Still Your Friend 
The so-called momentum effect is one of the strongest and most pervasive phenomena of any market phenomenon studied. Researchers have verified its value with many different asset classes, as well as across groups of assets. The momentum effect works in terms of asset’s performance relative to its peers in predicting future relative performance, and momentum also works well on an absolute, or time series basis, where an asset’s own past return predicts its future performance. In absolute momentum, there is significant positive auto-covariance between an asset’s return next month and its past one-year excess return. Absolute momentum appears to be just as robust and universally applicable as crosssectional momentum. It performs well in extreme market environments, across multiple asset classes (commodities, equity indices, bond markets, currency pairs), and back in time to the turn of the century.
In short, the trend is your friend until, like was seen in gold, it is decisively broken. 
Foreign Investors Pile Into Japan
Having ignited a virulent “short yen, long Nikkei trade”, Shinzo Abe and his BoJ buddies continue playing the market psychology game to the hilt, knowing that a change in consumer, corporate and investor sentiment can be just as good as “real” change through what George Soros termed reflexivity.  Japanese policymakers know full well that public expectation of more deflation can become self-fulfilling, and they are actively trying to change the way ordinary Japanese think about prices, just as they have engineered a dramatic turnaround in foreign investor sentiment. 
They see the fight against deflation not just as one that involves measures like quantitative easing, but also psychic warfare: Once Japan’s consumers and business leaders believe prices will start rising, there’s a better chance people will go out and spend, putting pressure on prices to go up. 
Ryuzo Miyao, a member of the Bank of Japan’s policy board, has actually said that deflation will end in the current fiscal year (to March 2014). “The achievement of 1 percent inflation in fiscal 2014 has come into sight,” Miyao said. “The public’s inflation expectations will rise gradually, and in this situation the inflation rate is likely to rise above 1% during fiscal 2014.”
While Piling In, They Also Discuss Possible Loss of Control By the BoJ
For many years very underweight and generally very pessimistic about Japan, foreign investors have piled into Japanese equities since November of last year, and this buying accelerated to a record weekly figure last week, according to the Tokyo Stock Exchange. A new net buying record of JPY1.58 trillion was set in the second week of April, after the Bank of Japan unveiled new “shock and awe” quantitative and qualitative easing measures under newly installed Governor Haruhiko Kuroda. The new data put cumulative net purchasing by foreign investors since mid-November, when the decision to dissolve the lower house was made, at JPY8.15 trillion.

Source: Nikkei Astra, Tokyo Stock Exchange, Japan Investor
JPY Billion

At the same time, they continue to discuss the probability that the Bank of Japan (BoJ) would lose control of the printing press and how a rapidly declining yen could lead to a replay of the 1997 Asian currency debacle. Perma bear Albert Edwards points out that investors may have forgotten that yen weakness was one of the immediate causes of the 1997 Asian currency crisis and Asia’s subsequent economic collapse. 

Japan Becomes Extremely Overbought
Regardless of whether the big Abenomics/BoJ bet eventually pans out, the following chart from Orcam Financial shows the Nikkei as the most overbought (i.e., above its 200-day MA) and Gold the most oversold, suggesting there is now ample room for a short-term mean reversion trade between the two (like short Nikkei, long gold), and this big contrarian call is exactly what CLSA strategist Chris Wood is now suggesting.
Hat Tip: Pragmatic Capitalism
The call is predicated on the non-belief that the US economy is “normalizing” and US QE will come to an end earlier than what investors currently expect. Indeed, it counts on the conjecture that the BoJ’s bold move on QE is not the last by a long shot. For one, Mario Draghi at the the ECB would love to do more if he thought he could get it by Germany. Support for this view comes from three regional Fed bank presidents saying a further decline in US inflation below the Fed’s 2% target may signal a need for more accomodation, not a potential curtailing of easing discussed by other Fed officials. 
Other brokers are beginning to suggest the Topix/Nikkei 225 is due for a 10% or so pause from the parabolic move upward since November of last year. In looking at individual stocks and sectors like Sumitomo Realty (8830.T) and the real estate sector as a whole, prices have already surged to Koizumi reform years peak levels, meaning a lot of the expected reflation for the foreseeable future is already priced in, given that Sumitomo Realty for example is already selling at a very rich P/E of 43X and a PBR of over 4X.

The Japan equity rally has been driven primarily by Nikkei 225 constituents, i.e., larger cap, more liquid names that foreign investors found the easiest to quickly raise their Japan exposure. However, the core 30, which includes more than its share of troubled electronic sector and other “dogs” continues to lag by a considerable margin. 
Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor

The best year-to-date performers in the Nikkei 225 include many real estate companies, both first and second-tier, major retailers, second-tier financials, heavy industry stocks and even a couple of pharmaceutical companies.

Over the past month, however, buying has gone from “all in” to more specific sector and stock selection, amidst continued selling by domestic financial institutions who see this as an ideal time to unload unwanted strategic holdings. The biggest irony is that the electric power “zombies” are on the leader board. while the bank sector has taken a breather. The growing sector divergence is indicative of the emergence of quick sector rotation
Source: Tokyo Stock Exchange, Japan Investor

Shinzo Abe and the LDP’s return to power has ignited growing expectations for reflation in Japan. To date, JPY as measured by the FXY Japanese Yen Trust ETF has fallen some 20% from late September 2012, while the Nikkei 225 has surged some 52% from a July 2012 low, although USD-based returns as measured by the EWJ iShares MSCI Japan ETF have been more like 22%+, largely on the credible commitment by the Abe Administration to what is now called “Abenomics”, which is essentially a three-pronged program to reflate Japan’s economy through, a) unlimited, aggressive BoJ quantitatve easing, b) a 10-year program of fiscal expenditures and c) a much less clear and even less politically agreeable structural reforms program.  
Foreign Investors Short Yen, Long Stocks and Real Estate
The primary driver of both the selloff in JPY and the surge in Japanese stocks has been foreign investors, who since mid-November 2012 have piled into Japanese equities to the tune of just under JPY6 trillion of net purchases. Speculative short JPY commitments of traders surged to at least 4-year highs, but trailed off somewhat as traders waited for the appointment of a new BoJ governor and two new deputy governors. Once governor Kuroda and two reflation proponent deputy governors were approved by Japan’s Diet, short JPY commitments of traders surged again. 
Ironically, domestic institutions have been doing the opposite, mechanically selling stocks and buying bonds as stocks surge above their benchmark asset allocation rates, and they realize gains ahead of their end-March accounting years. As shown in the table below, domestic financial institutions continue to be consistent net sellers of Japanese equities, as, in large part, do domestic individual investors. 
Source: Japan Stock Exchange, Japan Investor

Source: Oanda
Foreign money is also pouring back into Japanese real estate. After several years away from the market, major institutional investors, such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc., are beginning to look for promising properties in Tokyo and other major Japanese cities. The lagging indicator of average national land prices fell in the year to January 1, 2013, but at the slowest pace since the 1980s bubble burst, by just 1.8%.

Goldman Sachs is buying older buildings for lease in Tokyo’s Kanda and Shibuya district through a special purpose vehicle. GS launched a private fund last autumn through its asset management unit. Grosvenor Group, a British real estate firm, recently acquired a luxury rental condo in Tokyo’s Minato Ward. Asian investors are also noticing signs of a major upturn in the Japanese real estate market and looking for medium- to long-term investments. In response, Tokyo Tatemono (8804) 
has teamed up with a real estate broker in Shanghai for selling Japanese properties to well-to-do Chinese. A growing number of deep-pocketed Chinese individual investors have been looking for Japanese condos and buildings for investment. Tokyu Livable Inc. (8879), a major real estate broker, also set up a local unit in Shanghai last year to capitalize on surging interest in Japanese properties among Chinese. 

The effects of the growing foreign investment presence have been especially notable in large-scale distribution facilities, which has been built up by aggressive investments by U.S. and Singaporean real estate firms since 2010. Major Japanese players like Mitsubishi Estate and Mitsui Fudosan Co. (8801) have also rushed into the market.

Go for Reflation Plays

While Japan’s exporters benefit from the weak JPY, the best ways to play the Japan reflation story are 1) broker/dealers who ostensibly benefit from surging foreign buying and increased market trading volume, 2) real estate companies, including J-REITs. Thus if you were to buy only two stocks to play the Japan reflation story, one would be Nomura Securities (ADR: NMR, TSE: 8604) and the other would be a real estate company like Sumitomo Realty (TSE: 8830), as the Topix broker/dealer subindex is up over 122% in the past six months and the real estate sub-index is up over 77%, compared to a Topix gain of just under 40%. 
As the chart below shows, Nomura and Sumitomo Reality in particular are larger-cap high-beta plays on the reflation story. 
Source: BigCharts.com
If you want even more bang for your buck, venture back into Japan’s small cap segment, as the JASDAQ is trashing the already not-too-shabby surge in the Nikkei 225. The JASDAQ, while extremely sensitive to the reflation story, is at the same time much less sensitive to the day-to-day fluctuations in JPY/USD or JPY/EUR rates. 
Source: BigCharts.com
The 2012 phenomenon was a range of escatological beliefs that cataclysmic or transformative events would occur around 21 December 2012, ostensibly because the Mayan long count calendar ended on that date. These doomsday predictions had people so worked up that NASA was hundreds of calls a day, to the point they felt compelled to post a video on the NASA site to quell fears and debunk the myth, despite the fact that professional Mayanist scholars had state all along that predictions of impending doom were no where to be found in any of the extant classic Maya accounts, and that the idea that the Long Count calendar ends in 2012 misrepresented Maya history and culture. 
A similar mania has gripped the financial world, and that is the so-called fiscal cliff, a phrase introduced by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to describe the potential fiscal drag in 2013 from the expiration of Bush tax cuts, payroll tax cuts, Alternative Minimum Tax patches and spending cuts from last summer’s debt ceiling agreement. The U.S. Congressional Budget Office has projected that the country will fall into a recession if legislators allow all changes to go through, and Wall Street investment houses followed through with projections that the US economy could shrink as much as 4.5% if the U.S. Congress sat back and did nothing. 
Investors further read and hear of an imminent fiscal disaster from the rapid build-up in US deficits following the 2008 financial crisis. From the movement in the financial markets, however, it looks as if we will usher in 2013 with no major blowups, and could even see a year of decent economic recovery and general recovery in risk assets. 
Armageddon Averted
In all probability however, fiscal Armageddon has already been averted. After the Lehman Brothers in September 2008 nearly triggered a global financial meltdown, both the U.S. Fed and Treasury intervened heavily, the ostensible objective being to stabilize the system and circuit-break the self-reinforcing fear that was already rippling through the global financial system. To sell it to Congress and the public, the Obama Administration, the Treasury and the Fed also threw in the mission of getting banks to loan out money they received, and helping to stabilize the battered housing market. In terms of its stated objectives, TARP, it is widely recognized that TARP did help prevent financial Armageddon, while it failed in stimulating bank loans to the more deserving businesses and in stabilizing the U.S. housing market. But saving the global financial system was not without costs, as some (particularly politicians) claim. Further, TARP does not include the $187.5 bailout of mortgage finance GSEs Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Even with $50.5 billion in dividend income, taxpayers are still out of pocket $137 billion from that rescue.
Source: CNN
But the original TARP criticisms fell far wide of the mark. Firstly, while tagged as a $700 billion program, only around $466 billion was actually dispersed. Secondly, just under $370 billion has been generated in direct government revenues from the program, including asset sales, capital gains, dividends, interest income and warrant premiums. Thirdly, the “too-big-to-fail” banks have already repaid their loans, and the Treasury Department has sold its remaining stake in AIG. Re-listed General Motors (GM, says it was buying back 200 million shares from the government. The US treasury still owns about 26% of the company, and would need about $53.00/share for these to break even, versus a recent quote of $25 +/share, for an unrealized loss of just under $14 billion. Thus by late 2012, TARP losses have been paired down to just under $14 billion, including $6 billion for programs to prevent foreclosure that were never meant to be paid back. In October, the Congressional Research Service was forecasting losses for the whole auto industry bailout of around $7.3 billion. However, a Center for Automotive Research (CAR) study reported that the automobile industry as a whole generated $91.5 billion in state and local tax revenue and $43 billion in federal tax revenue in 2011. As of October 2012, the Congressional Research Service was estimating $24 billion in costs, while the latest Office of Management and Budget estimates were for $63 billion in costs. 
Even Neil Barofsky, the original Special Inspector General and an outspoken critic of the bailout, has conceded that a lot of money has been paid back. “The loss will be much smaller than anyone thought in 2009.” 
Central Banks Still Backstopping Financial Sector and Governments 
Given a financial crisis of the scale seen in 2008, three groups needed to significantly adjust, i.e., a) the financial sector needs to recognize losses and recapitalize, b) both debt-ridden households and corporations need to deleverage, and c) governments went deeply into debt trying to keep economies from falling into recession/depression amidst private sector deleveraging. 
The financial crisis created a vicious cycle, where each sector’s burdens and efforts to adjust worsen the position of the other two. Central banks are caught in the middle, and are being pushed by governments and investors to use what power they have to contain the damage; pushed to directly fund the financial sector, and pushed to maintain extraordinarily low interest rates as well as quantitative easing to ease the strains on fiscal authorities, households and firms. This intense pressure puts the central banks’ price stability objectives, their credibility and, ultimately, their independence, at risk. 
For fiscal and monetary policy makers it was and is therefore critical to break the vicious cycle, thereby reducing the pressure on central banks. But this is much easier said than done. Private sector banks, the real creators of money in an economy, need to be speedily recapitalized and rebuild capital buffers. Financial authorities must implement financial reforms and extend them to shadow banking activities that prior to the crisis played a major role in credit creation, and limit the size and significance of the financial sector to the extent that a failure of one institution does not trigger a financial crisis. Revitalizing banks and reducing their relative size to the economy breaks the vicious cycle of destructive interaction with other sectors and clears the way for the next steps—fiscal consolidation and deleveraging of the private non-financial sectors of the economy. A move back to balanced economic growth will only be possible once balance sheets across all sectors are repaired. 
Souce: Bank of International Settlements
No Return to the Pre-crisis Economy, With or Without Stimulus? 
However, pervasive balance sheet repair takes years, if not decades. Regardless of whether TARP eventually is a net plus for government revenues, investors and economists all recognize that there will be no quick return to the pre-crisis economy, with or without additional stimulus. Great Recessions do not happen every decade — this is why they are called “great” in the first place. After the great 2008 financial crisis, the arteries of the global monetary system are now clogged with debt used to stabilize the situation, Since it simply cannot all be serviced or repaid, it won’t be. Further, the sheer size of the debt is choking off economic growth. Thus the pressure on central banks to provide monetary stimulus, ease fiscal strains while also easing funding strains is expected to continue for the foreseeable future. 
The following graph shows public debt to revenue for major economies. With public debt now at 750 times revenue and still rising, it is eminently obvious that particularly Japan cannot simply grow its way out of debt with any sort of realistic growth rate assumption (e.g., 3%~4% P.A.).
Source: Ithuba Capital
Wanted: A Post-Keynesian and Monetarist Approach
In terms of fiscal policy, the Keynes economic doctrine of demand management has made a striking comeback, after more than 30 years of intellectual eclipse from the mid-1970s to 2008—led by the likes of Larry Summers, Paul Krugman and Ben Bernanke. However, others like Jeffery Sachs are now suggesting that Keynesian policies such as a) big fiscal packages, b) record low interest rates, and c) “unlimited” QE, while ostensibly appropriate for recessions/depressions, may be the wrong tools to address deep structural change—i.e., these Keynesian policies are fighting the last war, whereas the new path to growth could be very different from even the recent past. 
Indeed, we may be fast approaching the tail end of a 40-year experiment in fiat money and the mother of all credit-fueled expansions that began when President Nixon severed the link between gold and the US dollar in 1971. Last week the US Federal Reserve yet again announced more QE through the purchase of $45 billion of US Treasuries every month. Between this program and the Fed’s QE 3 Program announced in September, the Fed will be monetizing $85 billion worth of assets every month; $40 billion worth of Treasuries and $45 billion worth of Mortgage Backed Securities, ad infinitum as the Fed tries to counter a dysfunctional U.S. Congress allowing the U.S. economy to fall over or slide down the fiscal cliff/slope. 
Thus investors have been reduced to central bank watchers looking for the next liquidity fix. What is disturbing, as was pointed out by the Zero Hedge blog, is the similarity between the stock market so far in 2012 and what happened to stocks when faced with a similar “debt ceiling” issue in 2011. The inference of course is that, contrary to consensus, stock prices are still not seriously discounting the risks to 2013 economic growth from the fiscal cliff and/or the ensuing austerity.
Source: Zero Hedge
A benign outcome from Democrat and Republican last-minute fiscal cliff negotiations of course would ensure a firm floor under stocks prices, being that these prices are strongly supported by renewed Fed QE balance sheet expansion
Bottom Line, QE Does Not Equal Runaway Inflation
Central bank balance sheet policies have supported the global economy through a very difficult crisis, but at what costs and risks of massive balance sheet deployment? Doesn’t this pose the risk of an eventual blow-up in inflation? Not according to the Bank of International Settlements. This is because these central banks are still largely pushing on a string. The relationship between increases in central bank balance sheets and base money has been rather weak for both advanced and emerging market economies since 2007. The correlation between central bank asset expansion and broad money growth has been even weaker; in advanced economies, and is even slightly negative. This reflects instability in the money multiplier (broad money over monetary base) over this period. Similarly, the correlation between the change in central bank assets and consumer price inflation has been virtually zero. In sum, bloated central bank balance sheets do not seem to pose a direct inflation risk, but there is a noticeable link to the value of that country’s fiat currency.
US Stock Market Volatility Yes, Serious Selloff, No 
As a result, it would probably take a particularly negative “no action whatsoever”, or worse, serious austerity as an outcome of a fiscal cliff deal, to trigger a significant selloff in U.S. stock prices, which investors are correctly assuming is highly unlikely, as any sharp selloff would act like a sharp pencil in the backs of U.S. politicians reminding them of what is at stake in terms of the financial markets. What financial markets are basically signaling to investors is that progress continues to be made in breaking the vicious debt deflation cycle, as long as the central banks remain committed to backstopping the adjustment process. While admittedly a simplistic view, a simple comparison of current S&P 500 levels and the prior 2007 high indicates the U.S. has repaired roughly 90% of damage wrought by the 2008 financial crisis. 
Source: BigCharts.com
It is interesting to note that 10Yr treasury yields have also bottomed despite the Fed’s renewed purchases of treasuries, given a quick 7% depreciation in USD (in terms of the UUP ETF), and the long-treasuries chart indicating a significant back-up in yields as possible, to 2.25%~2.50%, in fairly short order. Rising treasury yields imply growing inflation expectations, ostensibly arising from improved expectations for U.S. economic growth in 2013, not the recession that everyone is warning about when discussing the fiscal cliff. On the other hand, the financial media is reporting that investors/traders see U.S. bond yields as at or near the highs of a range investors see persisting into next year. 
The initial estimate of US GDP growth in Q3 (July, August, and September) was an underwhelming 2%. Since then, the numbers have been revised up, and then revised up again. While short of what can be considered a “robust” recovery, the 3.1% percent GDP reading is the best since the end of 2011, and the second-best quarter of the last three years. In Q2, real GDP increased only 1.3%. It remains to be seen just how much the psychological damage done to business and consumer confidence from the fiscal cliff debacle impacts the real economy.
Source: BigCharts.com
S&P SPDR Sector Performance: XLF is a Rally Bellwether 
The renewed vigor of the rally in the S&P 500 has been largely supported by the S&P 500 financials (XLF SPDR) as the bellwether for both Eurozone debt/banking crisis risk and U.S. economic growth expectations. As long as the XLF is matching or beating the S&P 500, perceived financial risk is low and investor attitude toward risk continues to improve. Conversely, should the S&P 500 see a significant selloff, it will most likely be led by the financials. 
The following chart shows the relative performance of the S&P 500 sector SPDRs since before the prior bubble, i.e., the IT bubble. In terms of relative performance, the financials “bubble” puts the prior IT bubble to shame, and underscores just how important the financial sector has become not only to the U.S. stock market, but to its economy as well. Thus in the U.S. at least, Wall Street is intricately connected to Main Street
The U.S. financial sector in turn has been backstopped by a sharp rally in the Eurostoxx Banks Index of some 56.8% from a late July low, on a clear commitment by the ECB to do “whatever it takes” to save the Euro. Even more dramatic has been the plunge in Greek sovereign bond yields from 35% to just over 10%, even though Greece was considered an irrecoverable basket case. The hedge funds that were brave enough to buy Greek bonds for just such a trade have so far been well-rewarded.
Source: Yahoo.com, Japan Investor
Source: 4-Traders.com
Greek 10Yr Bond Yield: Bloomberg
Gold versus US Treasuries: A Reversal from More Deflation to Rising Real Yields 
The other strong indicator of improving confidence in the economy and rising inflation expectations is the selloff in gold. While investors ostensibly find it difficult to determine a “fair” price for gold because it pays no yield and offers no earnings, it can be demonstrated that price of gold does respond to the trend in real interest rates, i.e., gold rallies when real interest rates are declining toward zero and especially rallies when real rates are below zero. Thus the recent price action in gold also reflects investor expectations that the foreseeable trend in real interest rates is more likely to be of rising real rates, i.e., a reversal from deflationary renewed lows. Long bonds (TLT ETF) have actually been outperforming gold (GLD ETF) since April of this year. 
The 30-year US Treasury bond tells us that the expected return over the next 30 years is a real return of 0.4 percent (2.8% yield minus a break-even inflation of 2.4%). This cannot last in a world of forced inflation via infinite monetary printing and a possible downgrade of the US if it fails to implement structural fiscal reforms. The Federal Reserve is expected to keep rates low for longer but in 2013 this could be challenged by the zero interest rate policy which forces investors to leave fixed income to attain any yield. 
With global bond markets worth some USD 157 trillion versus stock market capitalization of USD 55 trillion (McKinsey & Company), there is three dollars in fixed income for every one dollar in stocks. Thus every 10 percent reduction in mutual fund holdings of bonds moved to the equity market would produce 30% of net inflows into stocks, leading not only to higher US rates, but also creating one of the greatest stories ever told in the equity market.
Source: Yahoo.com
Source: Wealth Daily
China’s Soft Landing 
After months and months of debate, it now appears that China’s economy is not collapsing, but rather settling into a slightly slower, but still brisk pace of growth. Chinese GDP growth for 2012 of 7.7% to 7.8% is now looking very doable, just above former Premier Wen Jiabao’s target of 7.5%. After 9.2% growth in 2011, the first two years of the decade are averaging 8.5%, and 7.1% for the rest of the decade now seems very doable. With a trade surplus a quarter below its peak, stabilized housing prices, consumption rising as a share of GDP, and inflation below target, the situation in China looks decidedly benign as the government works to shift economic growth more toward domestic consumer demand. 
The narrower FXI China ETF of 25 blue chips has been reflecting this revisionist view among foreign investors for some time (i.e., September), while the Shanghai Composite—much more influenced by domestic individual investors trading more on rumors than fundamentals. At some point, higher stock prices will shake out even the most adamant China bears, which could well exacerbate the upward move.
Source: Yahoo.com
Macro Fundamentals Now Show Japanese Equities in a Much More Favorable Light 
Since the Nikkei 225 has historically had a good positive correlation with U.S. 10-year bond yields and the JPY/USD exchange rates is highly correlated to the spread between US and Japanese 2-year as well as 10-year bond yields, rising US bond yields offer good macro (top-down) support for rising Japanese equities. 
Since the onset of the 2008 financial crisis, Japanese equities have woefully underperformed other developed market equities, seriously hobbled by a) structural rot in Japan’s domestic economy, b) an incessantly high JPY, that c) is seriously harming both the volume and profit margins of exports, which have become the primary engine of extremely cyclical growth in Japan’s economy.
Source: Yahoo.com
The above chart dramatic long-term underperformance of Japanese equities, which are still in the mother of all bear markets. The only flash of hope during this period was the brief period when the unconventional, reformist-minded Junichiro Koizumi was in power, as represented by the cyclical rise in Japanese stock prices between 2003 and 2007 when foreign investors came to the view that Japan was “back”.
This secular bear market has essentially all but completely wrung growth expectations out of stock prices. As a result, valuations of Japanese equities have been very cheap for some time, with a median forward P/E multiple of 18.6X but no less than 2,364 individual stocks trading between 4X and 12X earnings, a median dividend yield of 2.15% while 1,456 stocks trade at dividend yields between 3.5% and 5.0%, and a median price/book ratio of 1.49X, while 2,300 stocks trade at PBRs between 0.3X and 0.9X book value.
The problem was, it was hard to see any catalyst that could allow investors to capitalize on what had become a value trap. As global investors were very underweight Japanese equities, Shintaro Abe’s aggressive statements about a weaker JPY, a more aggressive BoJ and specific price targets were just the potential catalyst that foreign and domestic institutional investors were desperate for. As Mr. Abe’s LDP took the recent elections by a landslide, foreign investors are now keyed on, a) a weaker JPY and b) a more aggressive BoJ.  
While the surging Nikkei 225 is looking over-extended short-term, there is potentially much more return available over the next six~twelve months. Assuming JPY does weaken to JPY90/USD or more, and the US-Japan bond yield spread continues to widen, the Nikkei 225 has the potential to challenge its post-2008 financial crisis rebound high of 11,286 (+11%), and even its pre-crisis May 2008 high of 14,338 (+41%) if the Abe Administration does indeed instigate a real recovery in Japan’s economy
Abe “Magic” a Convenient Catalyst to Recognize Improving Macro Market Fundamentals
While most investors readily recognized that Japanese equities were cheap, the biggest impediment was that most investors could not see any fundamental change that would act as a catalyst to unlock this apparent value; only inept political bungling by the ruling Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), growing friction with China that was hurting trade, and continued over-valuation of JPY. 
However, rising US long-term yields provide a favorable macro backdrop for a rally in Japan’s Nikkei 225, which historically has exhibited a fairly high positive correlation with U.S. 10-year treasury yields, ostensibly because rising treasury yields tend to lead to wider spreads between U.S. and Japan long bond yields, which in turn is highly correlated with a weaker JPY. So far, Shintaro Abe has only provided a catalyst for hope, with his speeches about a weaker JPY, inflation targeting and a more aggressive BoJ on the campaign trail leading up to December 16 general elections hitting all the right buttons with foreign and domestic institutional investors.
Going forward into 2013, investors will continue to key on the BoJ. BoJ Governor Shirakawa’s term is up at the end of March, 2013, as is two other policy board members. Topping the short list of possible new BoJ governors is Kazumasa Iwata, who has publicly advocated BoJ should purchases of Y50tn worth of Eurozone government bonds with a view to weakening the yen as a natural extension of the central bank’s current asset purchase program. New prime minister Abe has also appointed Yale economics professor Koichi Hamada as a special adviser to his cabinet. Hamada has also advocated the purchase of foreign currency bonds as well as of longer dated Japanese government bonds. Thus outgoing governor Shirakawa is now extremely isolated politically, and the Abe Administration has one of the best chances in decades to ensure the appointment of not one but three BoJ board member reflationists.
For the Hope Rally to Morph into a Fundamental Recovery Rally, Abe Must Walk the Talk
But the litmus test for sustainability in the budding Japan stocks rally is, a) expanding US-Japan bond yield spreads supported by rising economic growth/inflation expectations in the U.S., b) faster growth in the BoJ’s balance sheet than either the ECB or the Fed, and c) a transformation from deflation to inflation expectations in Japan. 
Abe was advised by LDP peers such as his new finance minister and ex-prime minister Taro Aso to steer clear of more controversial issues and to just concentrate on the economy for the time being, and it appears that is what Abe is doing.
Abe’s erely managing to stay in office for his full four year term would greatly stabilize policy management. After having abruptly resigned as prime minister with less than a year in office five years ago, he will be under pressure to shed the stigma as a fragile leader by steadily showing progress on a number of fronts and maintaining the support of his political party and the voting public for at least one full term. This alone would be quite an accomplishment considering that Japan has seen seven prime ministers in the last six years.
In addition to a much more aggressive BoJ, the effectiveness of Abe’s economic policies will be greatly affected by the functionality of a re-instated Council on Fiscal and Economic Policy and the “headquarters for Japan’s economic revitalization” that Abe plans to set up. Early steps to create forward momentum in restoring Japan’s economic engine would go a long way in helping to address a plethora of thorny issues Japan faces, including a monstrous government debt burden, a creaking social welfare and pension system, territorial disputes with China, the highly contentious TPP negotiations and the consumption tax hike issue.
Yet while the LDP-New Komeito coalition has won a super majority in the Lower House, it is still the minority political group in the Upper House, meaning a split Diet. Like his predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, he will need to heed and marshal voters, business and investors to make his case within his own party and with opposition parties to overcome the debilitating political gridlock that characterized the brief leadership of the country under the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ). Fortunately, with the DPJ party in almost complete disarray and other political opposition splintered among many smaller new political parties, the heretofore main opposition DPJ is in no state to seriously impede Diet business.
Biggest Risk is a Dramatic Reversal in Inflationary Expectations
The currency and stock markets have reacted positively to Abe’s promises to a) instate an inflation target of 2%-3% by the BoJ, b) get the BoJ to purchase construction bonds to c) fund an immediate JPY10 trillion fiscal stimulus package and up to JPY200 trillion of fiscal expenditures over the next 10 years to revitalize Japan’s rusting infrastructure,
So far, these are merely campaign promises.
The biggest risk is that these reflation attempts are too successful, causing a dramatic shift from a chronic deflationary mindset to one of excessive inflation expectations, but in the current environment of deflationary expectations, not only in Japan but in the Eurozone and the U.S. as well. Rising inflationary expectations could trigger a lose in confidence in Japan’s bond market, triggering a serious blowup in bond yields that would a) dramatically weaken JPY and b) create big potholes in the balance sheets of Japan’s JGB-laden balance sheets. In the worst case, Abe and the LDP could merely return to the old LDP playbook of wasteful fiscal expenditures while avoiding unpopular but essential economic reforms, i.e., a repeat of the 1990s insanity, where, with the exception of the Koizumi-led reform years, the LDP kept repeating the same mistakes, each time hoping for a different outcome.
Such an approach will only not work, but would merely accelerate Japans fall over its own excessive debt fiscal cliff. Extremely low and stable interest rates on JGBs will end sooner or later, and the new government needs to recognize that it will only be buying time unless the thorny structural issues are addressed head-on. JGB yields have already bounced on the expectation of more stimulative economic policies, but have a long, long ways to go before crossing the rubicon, as again-in-recession Japancontinues to suffer from debilitating excess domestic capacity. Thus Abe effectively has only one choice, and that is to push forward in reflating and revitalizing Japan’s economy.  
Exporter Breakeven JPY/USD Exchange Rate Still Around JPY85/USD
The breakeven exchange rate for Japanese exporters has dropped dramatically from just under JPY115/USD circa 2003 to around JPY85/USD by late 2011, but is still above actual exchange rates, meaning the Abe-instigated selloff in JPY has so far merely pushed the JPY/USD rate back toward, but not significantly above the breakeven exchange rate.
A selloff to around JPY95/USD would create a significant positive windfall for Japanese exporter corporate profits in FY2013 and provide a very welcome upside earnings surprise, although stock prices of Japan’s exporters discount exchange rates in real time. A weaker JPY would also very likely prevent a further mass exodus of production capacity by Japan’s automobile section—still its most competitive and influential to the domestic economy in terms of ripple effects on the steel, plastics and chemicals, electrical equipment, and ceramics industries.
A Significantly Weaker JPY Will Alleviate, But Not Solve Japan’s Global Competitiveness Deficit
Economic development is a process of continuous technological innovation, industrial upgrading, and structural change driven by how countries harness their land, labor, capital, and infrastructure. For the last twenty years, all but a few Japanese companies and certainly all of Japan’s public institutions have steadfastly resisted the tsunami of globalization sweeping over Japan. Public organizations and the organizations of many corporations are unchanged from the emerging, high growth era of the 1970s.
Even Japan’s largest firms have muddled along with woefully out-dated business models, group-think insider boards of directors and generally poor corporate governance. While much of the developed world now seeks diversity in corporate boards that is more congruent with the sex and nationality of their employees, the global structure of their businesses and the demands of their institutional investors, Japanese companies still have an average of only 2 outside directors of dubious independence on their generally bloated insider boards, and have dramatically fewer outside directors than their peers in Hong Kong, Singapore or South Korea.
 Integrated Electronic Firms as Symbols of the Problem
Japanese electronic firms used to be on the leading edge of evolutionary and revolutionary new product development, as evidenced by Sony’s Walkman audio player, flat screen TVs, the VTR, CD ROMs and high definition (analog) TV and NTT’s iMode mobile phones. More recent attempts however such as Blue Ray discs have been hobbled by the lack of standard formats and commercial flops such as 3D TV.
As global demand shifted from the developed nations to emerging markets, Japanese electronic companies found that their products in many cases had too sophisticated designs that priced these products out of the reach of a growing aspirational middle class, while their high end product strategies were blindsided by new “outside the box” products that redefined mature product areas, such as Apple’s iPod, iPhone and iPad. This relegated Japanese firms to establishing assembly operations offshore in cheap labor countries, mainly China, while Japan’s exports shifted to niche components and sub-assembly products that were mere cogs in a regional supply chain.
An incessantly higher JPY and cutthroat price competition at the lower end “volume zone” cut heavily into profitability, forcing repeated bouts of restructuring that stunted new product development and capital expenditures, causing major integrated electronic firms to fall farther and farther behind in dynamic new industry segments.  At the same time, Japanese firms have been particularly inept at developing the consumer/user friendly software and applications make computers, new 3G/4G phones and other electronic products so appealing.
As in the aerospace industry, Japanese electronics firms were never able to establish and grow profitable foodchains/architectures such as the once all-powerful Windows/Intel or the Apple iPod/Phone/Pad empire, as the “soft” portions of the foodchain where the real money was made was always outsourced.
Significantly Weakening JPY May be Easier Said than Done, and if too Successful, Could Create a Global Crisis
JPY has been in a secular bull market versus USD since Nixon severed the USD link to gold and Japan allowed JPY to float. Over the past 20 years, annual growth in the supply of JPY or Japan’s monetary inflation rate, has averaged only 2% PA, and is presently near this long-term average. This means JPY, over the past two decades, has by far the slowest rate of supply growth of the major currencies, ergo, JPY has been in a secular bull market simply because there has structurally not been enough JPY supplied to meet demand for the Japanese currency. As a result, JPY has gained the reputation of a “hard” currency and safe haven despite a dramatically deteriorating public debt position, supported by Japan’s position as a net creditor nation with a structural current balance of payments surplus. 

Source: Speculative Investor
While Japan’s monetary inflation exceeded 10% PA during the 1980s boom years, growth collapsed in 1990-1991 with the crash in the stock and property markets. Conversely, US monetary inflation surged after the 2008 financial crisis as the Fed flooded the financial market with USD swaps to keep the global financial system afloat. Thus even the most aggressive BoJ (where “aggressive” is very much against character) would struggle to supply enough monetary inflation to offset the tsunami of greenbacks. The BoJ stands accused of doing too little too late to combat deflation and reflate Japan’s economy with a weaker JPY, but since the 2008 crisis, they haven’t stood a chance of depreciating JPY against the onslaught of currency debasement by the ECB and the Fed.
How Much Can the BoJ’s Balance Sheet be Realistically Expanded without Consequences?
The rapid ageing of Japanese society is a widely known phenomenon. Total population has recently started to fall, and the working age population had already started to fall around 1995 by the middle of this century, thus population shrinkage, particularly in the working population, is expected to be quite dramatic. With the working age population shrinking, unless technology allows a smaller workforce to produce more output per head, Japan’s GDP without a policy offset could essentially trend sideways to slightly minus. With Japanhaving one of the most rapidly graying societies in the world, nominal GDP should become the focus rather than real GDP, as GNP includes financial income from the rest of the world, and is a better reflection of the “feel” of the economy among people on the street.
One of Saxo Bank’s 10 Outrageous Predictions for 2013 has the BoJ formalizing nominal GDP targeting and ballooning its balance sheet to almost 50% of GDP to spur inflation and weaken JPY. But the question of just how far the BoJ can expand its balance sheet without triggering a bond rout is a very valid question. As of January 2012, major developed country central bank assets as a percent of IMF forecast nominal GDP showed that the BoJ’s balance sheet was already well over 30% of GDP, versus under 20% for the Fed, The BoJ’s balance sheet to GDP has already surpassed the 30% peak seen during 1995~1996 when the BoJ first experimented with full-scale QE. While high versus other developed nations, however, China takes the prize for having the largest central bank balance sheet to GDP by a mile.

Further, when converted to USD and shown in absolute USD amounts, it is very evident that the BoJ had fallen way behind China, the ECB and the Fed in terms of the sheer comparative volume of QE, and thus the relative supply of JPY (degree of debasement) has been much lower, making JPY much stronger relative to other fiat currencies.

Source: James Bianco
Continued Investor Faith in the Efficacy of Monetary Countermeasures is Key

If global investors were to lose faith in the efficacy of global quantitative easing, risk appetite could significantly retrench, vaulting JPY to the fore again for a time as the world’s strongest currency due to deflation and repatriation of investments, and the rapid unwinding of carry trades. In this case, JPY could surge to JPY60/USD and other JPY crosses head even more violently lower, possibly triggering a fiscal crisis in Japan that would force the LDP government and the BoJ to reach for even more radical measures to weaken JPY and reflate Japan’s economy amidst a renewed global financial crisis.

Shinzo Abe has already decided to scrap the country’s spending cap for the annual budget, previously capped at a measly JPY71 trillion, excluding debt-servicing costs, and JGB yields have already seen a noticeable uptick, with the biggest 5-day run-up in 10yr JGB yields in over 13 months. As the following chart shows, Japan’s 30-year bond yields have already reacted to a structural shift in Japan’s balance of trade from surplus to deficit by breaking out of a downtrend in place since early 2008, while the uptick in 10-year yields is still barely perceptible and still 125 bps below the 2007 high. Thus the BoJ and the Abe Administration have much heavy lifting ahead of them in convincing investors that Japan is really committed to reflating Japan’s economy, and the gap between the sharp Nikkei 225 rebound and still-low JGB yields reflects the current gap between bond and equity market investor expectations, as the Nikkei 225 has so far reacted primarily to the recent selloff in JPY.


Source: FX Street
Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor
Foreign Buying Will Again Fuel the Rally
Since domestic financial institutions will be positioning their portfolios for the closure of accounts for FY2012 at the end of March 2013, the rally in Japanese stocks through the end of the year and into the first quarter of 2013 will have to be almost exclusively driven by foreign investors, and moreover in sufficient enough quantity to offset a noticeable drag from net selling by domestic institutional investors trying to book gains before the end of the accounting year.
Since Abe’s bullish comments triggered a JPY selloff in mid-November, foreign investors have already been net buyers of Japanese equity by some JPY1.13 trillion, while domestic individuals and institutions have sold some JPY1.09 trillion of Japan equity.

Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor
 Sectors Leading Japan’s Rally
The rally in Japan is being driven by the high beta broker/dealers and the steel Topix sectors, while the airlines, other products (like Nintendo) and mining sectors have noticeably lagged. While the banks have been leading in the U.S., stocks in Japan’s banking sector are so far showing only an average rebound, perhaps because they are already widely held in many foreign portfolios. 

Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor
The best performing Nikkei 225 stocks year-to-date are dominated by second-tier city banks (Shinsei, Aozora), broker/dealers (Daiwa, Nomura), and the real estate stocks(Tokyu, Sumitomo, Heiwa, Tokyo Tatemono, Mitsui Fudosan), all of which have offered year-to-date returns in excess of 40%.

Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor

LDP prime minister candidate Shintaro Abe raised eyebrows overseas with his political stumping speech that he would force the BoJ to a) set an explicit inflation target (2%~3%) and b) have the BoJ outright purchase construction (deficit-covering) bonds. He was delighted to see that his comments had an immediate impact on JPY, nudging it below what has been long-term support to below JPY82/USD. 
It has been a familiar battle cry among long-suffering Japan bulls that Japanese equities are very cheap on a valuation basis. Problem is, there was a sore lack of a catalyst preventing their cheapness from merely becoming a value trap. Due to unfavorable demographics and a severe bout with deflation, Japanese equities have been in a bear market for well over two decades. The second problem has been the soaring yen, which punished the very multinational Japanese firms that foreign investors were typically large holders of. 
Source: Yahoo.com
A simple technical analysis of the Nikkei 225 Japan equity benchmark shows the index is indeed at a significant turning point. But will the Nikkei break to the upside or the downside? The last five years have been a particularly difficult slog for Japanese stock prices, with the global financial crisis and recession being exacerbated by a major earthquake/tsunami/nuclear crisis disaster, and an incessantly strong JPY, during which Japanese stocks languished even as the S&P 500 was recovering most of the ground lost from the 2007 peak. 
The USD-denominated iShares MSCI japan Index Fund (EWJ) has declined nearly 34% during this period, even though JPY, as measured by the CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust (FXY) appreciated nearly 34%…In other words, stock prices in JPY terms fell more like 68%, a major bear market by any measure. 
Since the strong JPY has been a major factor weighing on Japanese stock prices, the recent breakdown of JPY/USD below medium-, long-term support is good news for Japanese stock performance, and as long as JPY is weakening, Japanese stocks should break to the upside. The question then is, is the potential upside move enough to trade?
Best Case Scenario
Let’s assume that the LDP does win in the December 16 elections, and that the new government makes good on its promise to a) introduce more fiscal stimulus and b) force the BoJ to more aggressively address deflationary pressures, both of which get Japan’s sputtering economy growing again, aided by more weakness in JPY.
Now that the Nikkei 225 has broken to the upside, the most immediate upside target is the February 2011 pre-Tohoku crisis high of 10,892, which represents about 14% upside. If the U.S. slipping off the fiscal cliff does not derail recovery in 2013 and Euroland does not spiral into a more serious crisis, the LDP’s efforts could produce an even better rally, ostensibly to the March 2010 high of 11,286, which represents 18% potential upside. 
Beyond that, however, some serious structural reform and a credible program to address Japan’s debt monster is probably needed, along with the U.S. economy completely emerging from its post 2008 financial crisis malaise. 

Japan Passing

Posted: November 1, 2012 in BOJ, Japan Stocks, JGBs, JPY, Nikkei 225, Topix

A recent article in the Washington Post was titled, “A declining Japanloses its once-hopeful champions.” The once-common species has been virtually wiped out. The group has turned gradually into non­-believers, with several of the last hold­outs losing faith only recently, as Japan has failed to carry out meaningful reforms after the March 2011 triple disaster. Here’s a rogue’s gallery of what’s wrong with Japan.
 
 Horrible Demographics. Japan’s population of 127 million, already hugely skewed towards the unproductive and costly elderly (e.g., average female life expectancy is 86 years) is set to shrink by 800,000 every year between now and 2060 or to 32% of its 2010 level.
Horrible Debt Position. Public debt is 239% of GDP, and taxes cover just about half of total government spending.The government has just launched an eighth round of quantitative easing in an attempt to weaken the yen, but Japan’s GDP, once nearly 20% of the global economy, will be down to less than 5% by 2042.

Hat-Tip: Trading Economics
Inept, Gridlocked Political Leadership. Japanis, as one reporter termed it, “a nation of individual quiet lions led by political donkeys”. Japan’s workers are a hard-working, dutiful, courteous, resourceful and steadfast people who deserve better leaders, but keep in mind that it is they who elect these leaders, at least indirectly.
Timid Central Bank Monetary Policy. While the Bank of Japan was actually the first to introduce quantitative easing (QE) and zero interest rate (ZIRP) policies a decade ago, Japan’s central bank has not been as aggressive as its U.S.or ECB peers in utilizing its balance sheet to weaken JPY. It continues to disappoint foreign and domestic investors with incremental, reactionary rather than proactive monetary policy. That is no match for the trillions of USD being marshaled by the Fed.

Gravity-Defying Yen Strength. The Japanese yen has been appreciating steadily since 1971, when Richard Nixon severed the last remaining link of the US dollar to gold. The yen has continued to appreciate because, a) Japan has remained a net creditor nation based on a heretofore chronic balance of payments.
Given the above, Japan’s GDP growth has remained extremely volatile, with sustainable growth being 1% or less. Since 2008, Japan’s GDP growth has swung from +1.3% to -3.9%, and has recently basically been trending flat. 

Hat-Tip: Trading Economics

Hat-Tip: Trading Economics

Scheloric Ex-National Champions. All the above has resulted in sclerotic ex-national champion corporations with in-bred, risk-adverse leaders. Corporate management in general lacks the will and vision to take risks and fundamentally re-think their businesses, whereas Japan’s success was founded on single-minded mavericks, often engineers who were willing to go against the grain, take risks and stick their necks out, like Honda’s Ichiro Honda, Panasonic’s Konosuke Matsushita, or Sony’s Akio Morita. Consensus-insisting (group think) refusal to take hard decisions is fatally weakening them, as structural reforms (retrenchment) has been only a short-term fix. For example, Japan’s national champions in the electronics sector between 2000 and 2010 saw electronics production in Japan shrink by 41% and exports by 27%, as Japan’s global market share fell by nearly half to 10% by 2009, whereas South Korea’s rose to nearly 10%. Over the past two years, such former bluechips as Sharp (Tokyo: 6753), Sony (Tokyo:6758) and Panasonic (Tokyo: 6752) have lost so much money as to threaten their very existence and earn them previously unheard-of nnear “junk” credit ratings like Baa1; versus a cash position that was so strong in the mid-1980s to earn nicknames like Matsushita (Panasonic) Bank
Given the strong yen and other high operating costs in Japan, Japan’s industrial production is basically in secular decline with industry after industry being hollowed out as companies move production facilities overseas in a vain effort to maintain international competitiveness. The Ministry of Finance’s corporate survey shows minimal top-line sales growth even from the depressed post-Tohoku earthquake-tsunami-nuclear catastrophe levels. As a result, corporate profits have become extremely volatile as sales muddle along just above or below corporate break-even levels.
Source: Japan Ministry of Finance
No Appetite for Stocks Among Domestic Investors. Japan’s individual investors as well as investing institutions have little appetite for stocks preferring instead to keep excessive cash balances and preferring bonds (JGBs) and/or higher-yielding overseas investments over domestic equity. Because of a rapidly aging population, Japan’s largest (as well as the world’s largest) public pension fund, the Government Pension Investment Fund, is seeing its pension assets declining at a rate of JPY6~JPY8 trillion a year, forcing them to sell equities and bonds for pension payouts, and forcing their domestic asset managers to become secular net sellers of Japanese equities.

Given the above, it is not surprising that Japanese equities continue to seriously underperform the U.S. and other developed equity market peers, as foreign investors come around to the view that Japan is not just in a prolonged slump, but also in what may be an inescapable decline. The following chart of the EWJ MSCI Japan ETF relative to the SPY S&P 500 ETF clearly shows just how massive this relative under-performance has been over the last several years, despite periodic “contrarian” calls that now is the time to buy undervalued Japan, most recently immediately after the Tohoku catastrophe. Those who bought the “Japan reconstruction” story are now regretting it. 

Source: Yahoo.com
Steady Erosion in Market Capitalization. Relative performance is not the only issue. As a result of the steady erosion in Japanese stock prices, some 1,270 of a total 3,600 listed Japanese companies (or nearly half) have market capitalizations of JPY5 billion (USD62.5 million) or less, which would be considered a micro-cap company and off the investible universe radar screen of most overseas investors. Further, fewer and fewer investing institutions now offer Japan-specific mutual funds or institutional portfolios; instead offering “international” (ex-US) and “global” (with US) portfolios in which the exposure to Japanese equities is well below 10%, as the benchmark weight for Japanese equities in a MSCI EAFE-benchmarked portfolio is around 8%. Thus typical EAFE or Global portfolios will hold only 100 Japan equity names or less. The major exceptions to this general rule are the Chinese sovereign wealth funds (China Investment Company and SAFE Investment Company) who hold mainly a Topix-index-based portfolio of Japanese stocks, and who have been heavy buyers near previous market bottoms.
Hat Tip: Trading Economics
Small Cap Value Still Rewarding Those With the Patience to Find Them
But the bleak top-down view of Japan however masks some seriously undervalued, overlooked and unloved small cap companies that most investors just don’t have the time to investigate. There are a few funds however like the Fidelity Low-Priced Stock Fund (FLPSX) that are full of such bargain basement Japanese small caps, and who have managed to keep up with the S&P 500 by focusing on small-cap value stocks, whereever they can be found,  
Source: Yahoo.com



The recovery in Japan pretax corporate earnings in Q2 calendar 2012 slowed noticeably, to just 2% YoY growth versus 14% YoY growth in Q1, according to a Nikkei survey. This despite the low year-earlier comps for Q2 because profits in the first six months of 2011 where whacked nearly 20% by the March 11 earthquake/tsunami/nuclear disaster, and contrary to expectations of a sharp bounce-back. 
This is a different picture than painted at the beginning of the fiscal year to March 2013, as managements were projecting that pretax profit would rebound some 22% YoY in FY2012. With some 79 firms having already downgraded their full-year projections since June, full-year aggregate profit growth numbers are heading downward. As second-half FY2012 numbers are still more reflective of scenarios established at the beginning of 2012, there is more room for downward revisions. 
As expected, profits in Japan’s automobile industry bounced back sharply, with the combined pretax profit of some 50 firms including auto parts companies rebounding 440% as global supply chains were restored and domestic demand was bouyed by eco-car subsidies while foreign demand in the U.S. was supported by robust replacement demand. Thus the rebound in auto sector profitability accounted for a whopping 70% of the gains for the quarter. On the other hand,  13 of 17 manufacturing industries ended Q2 with pretax profit declines or even losses, Particularly hard-hit were basic materials industries such as steel and chemicals because of deteriorating market conditions in Asia as well as weaker demand in Europe. The demand weakness was exacerbated by the yen’s strength against both USD and particularly EUR. The bright spots were Softbank (9984), which is riding high on Apple-related demand and recorded record April-June pretax profits, and the real estate sector, boosted by the opening of new facilities. 
As Usual, Foreign Q1 Enthusiasm was Overdone

Foreign investor expectations for Japan over the past 10 years have shown wide swings, from out-right enthusiasm to utter despair. Generally, foreign investors place too much weight on the impact of the BOJ’s actions, such as in November 2011 and in spring 2012, when foreign investors perceived that the BOJ was moving to more aggressively utilize its balance sheet. The favorable impact of the BOJ moves lasted all of four months, and was over-stated by corresponding ECB action to alleviate Eurozone bank balance sheets with two LTRO cheap loan infusions, which triggered a world-wide investor “risk-on” scramble.
In Q1 2012, the Nikkei 225 actually was briefly one of the best performing equity markets, boosted by a) the general impression of more coordinated central bank action, b) the BOJ’s surprise February additional easing, c) the conjecture that Japan’s economy would receive a significant “Tohoku rebuilding” boost and d) 30%~40% YoY corporate profit growth, again apparently one of the highest expected profit momentums in 2012. 
As 2012 wore on, however, the bullish case for Japan once again began to crumble, even as market valuations became ever cheaper.  Consequently, foreign investors started taking profits, and have now been net sellers for the past six weeks. 
The China Link is Now a Big Discount Factor
Coming out of the 2008 financial crisis, emerging markets and China in particular were seen as the potential drivers for a recovery in global demand. But China’s economy is rapidly losing traction, and a serious of monetary easing steps in recent months doesn’t appear to be making any difference. July industrial production growth of 9.2% was the second month of slower growth, and consumption growth is also slowing. 
The government has goosed the state-run enterprises to renew active investment in large-scale projects, which is reviving fixed-asset investment, but foreign observers fear this will only exacerbate the malinvestments already obvious, as manufacturer inventories have surged 40% so far this year. The government is also keeping tight screws on real estate transactions.
For Japanese companies hoping that exports to China would drive a recovery, this is not good news. Nomura in Hong Kong is estimating only 5.5% growth, or well below the market consensus of over 7%, and big slides in exports from Taiwan and South Korea to China in July are an omnious warning for Japan’s exporters. Taiwan reported its fifth straight month of export declines in July, on double-digit declines in exports to China, Euroland and the U.S., South Korea’s July exports were the worst in nearly three years. Japan’s export growth to Asia had already turned minus in June, and the July Taiwan and South Korea numbers indicate that more of the same is ahead. 
Source: Nikkei Astra
Japan’s business cycle momentum, as measured by the YoY change in production minus the YoY change in inventories, is showing renewed slowing that cannot be good for the GDP numbers. In his recent statements, BOJ governor Shirakawa expressed concern about recent production and export trends in Japan, with production in the April-June quarter declining for the first time in a year, and export volumes already declining in May and June. 
As slowing economic activity in the developing nations becomes more noticeable, it is feeding back on Japan’s machinery orders, which in terms of seasonally adjusted private sector orders excluding electric power and shipbuilding, are now seen falling 1.2% in the July-September quarter. 
The key consideration of course is how much of this slowing in Japan’s economy and corporate profits is already in stock prices with the return trip to the low 8,000 level in June. The Nikkei 225 is again selling below aggregate stated book value, but given the heavy losses among companies like Sharp (6753) and the electric power companies, the sustainability of this book value is in as much doubt as is the sustainability of the profit recovery. 
The Head Scratcher is the Renewed Interest in Stocks by Domestic Institutions
Domestic investors, who had been heavy net sellers as foreign investors were piling into Japanese stocks on the BOJ action, are again on the opposite of the foreign trade, this time in the net buy column. 
Individual investors have been net buyers now for four straight weeks. Japan’s individual investors have proven time and again to be good market timers, especially with cash positions, and the market indices often bottom when individual investors are net cash buyers.  But the buying by domestic mutual funds as well as pension funds is also increasing. This buying has supported the Nikkei 225 briefly above 9,000 even as foreign investors were dumping their Japanese stocks, along with the brokers who were also selling their prop positions, coat tailing the foreign investors. 
Better domestic demand for equities notwithstanding, it is unlikely that domestic individuals or institutions will chase prices on the upside, meaning the probability of domestic profit-taking rises proportionally to the degree to which the major indices approach prior highs, particularly above the 10,000 mark on the Nikkei 225.