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December 20, 2005 The Nikkei: Raiders of the Lost Ark |
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Recently, a friend of mine told me about the timing newsletter to which he subscribes. Evidently, it had recently recommended Japan as a great play. If extrapolating the past few months' returns is the only measure we use in selecting investments, then, indeed, we should all be piling into the Nikkei.
While no one can state for sure what will happen to the Nikkei over the next few weeks or even months, a quick look at the macroeconomics picture tells us why this recent run-up is likely not signaling a turnaround for Japan. What I would like to do is take us through the "Museum of Not-Too-Distant History" and examine the returns in the Nikkei. Do they point to the emergence of a "Japanese Ark," with untold wealth for the investors who've found it, or will this ark spell "financial death" for those careless enough to touch it at the wrong time. Let's start out search by going to the section called the " Museum of Government Debt." As we comb through the artifacts of the Japanese monetary system, we find out that this time it is different. Well, maybe not different but unprecedented in size.
Yet, in some ways the story is the same. As w e cross the hall to the " Museum of Foreign Investment Holdings" section, we see that Japan has been accumulating foreign exchange reserves for decades. So again, purchasing U.S. assets is not a new discovery ensuring a vibrant economic future for Japan.
If we walk to the next exhibit, we can look at Japan's purchases of foreign exchange reserves from our own perspective. Here, we scan a small government document of 198 pages. After turning past the first hundred tables, we come to one called, Foreign Holdings of U.S. Long Term Securities, by Country, as of the Survey Dates. There, buried in a long list of country names, we find Japan. We notice two things. First, Japan's Ministry of Finance has been increasing their purchases of long-term securities in the U.S. for a number of years. As well, we see that Japan's purchases of U.S. assets have grown exponentially since the year 2000, and that Japan now has the largest amount of financial holdings of U.S. assets of any nation outside the United States. Billions of dollars
The size and scope of these numbers is substantial. From 1984 to 2004, Japan's long-term U.S. securities holdings grew 3100 percent! And for those of you curious about the nation with second highest level of U.S. securities, China's holdings have grown 1,694 percent from 1994 (the year they pegged the Renminbi to the U.S dollar) to 2004. 2 Now, where did Japan get the money to buy all of these U.S. long-term securities? Like Duncan states above, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) has given trillions of yen to Japan's Ministry of Finance (MOF), in exchange for MOF debt with virtually no yield. The MOF then invested those yen into US dollar-denominated debt instruments such as government bonds and agency debt. This can be easily verified by looking at another portion of this same 198-page document we mentioned earlier. A few pages prior, it shows the dollar amounts of each type of securities each country owns. Seventy-six percent of Japan's holdings are comprised of U.S. government long-term and short-term debt and U.S. government agencies. 3 So, why has Japan's Ministry of Finance bought our debt? It is not my intention to delve deeply into the trade balance debate between the U.S. and the Japanese. The fact is Japan experienced a fantastically speculative bubble in its stock and real estate markets, which popped in 1989. Since then the Japan has experienced a protracted bear market with its concomitant economic perils. True, Japan does earn a return when they invest in U.S. debt. Yet that is not their main objective. In the simplest of terms, Japan buys our debt to make Toyotas and Sonys more affordable for the U.S. consumer. In buying our debt, Japan keeps U.S. dollars out of circulation and, comparatively, more yen in circulation. Thus, with the law of supply and demand, the value of the yen is kept from rising against the dollar. As we depend on imports to keep our economy going, Japan, with little domestic demand, depends heavily on exports to keep their economy afloat. So, how has it worked? Though Japan's purchases of U.S. securities may have acted to keep more Japanese people employed, it does not take long to realize that this strategy has done little good for Japan's markets.
This chart from the " Museum of Japanese Financial History" reveals that the Nikkei has been trading near 15,800 in mid-December of 2005. While this is up 45 percent from May 2005, it is still 60 percent (23,177 points) lower than the Nikkei's all time high of 38,915 in December of 1989. For those who still don't believe in long term bear markets, let me repeat that year. 1989! It is also apparent that Japan's policy has done little to benefit the Japanese real estate markets over the last sixteen years.
I am a bit amused by those who think this time it is different, while Japan's fundamental macroeconomic environment is little changed over the last fifteen years. So, the question becomes, "who is buying into the Nikkei?" Though we cannot answer this question definitively, a closer look at the Japanese culture reveals who it is probably not.
You see, savings is still a heavily entrenched value in the Japanese culture. The Flow of funds data from the Bank of Japan,
If the Japanese nationals were unwilling to reduce their savings to move money into the Nikkei at its peak, it seems unlikely that they would do so today. Their culture, unlike our own, is still deeply entrenched in the discipline of saving. On the other hand, many Americans have come to believe that asset appreciation is the same thing as savings. The chart to the right shows this cultural shift in thinking quite well. As the markets have largely increased since the early 1980s, we have seen a corresponding decrease in our personal savings rate. This is accentuated by the recent negative savings rate, which has spanned five months as of October. 8 As further evidence of our propensity to invest in lieu of save, consider where US investors have their retirement funds.
So as all the bullish rhetoric comes out about the booming Nikkei, a word of caution is warranted. A look at the not-too-distant history of Japan tells us that little has changed. As various proponents of investing in the Nikkei extrapolate the potential earnings into the future, we do well to remember that extrapolating short-term trends can be very dangerous. In addressing Alan Greenspan's concerns about the low risk premium, which Greenspan did much to foster, Jeremy Grantham offers an explanation as to why the risk premium remains low. Grantham notes:
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Doug Wakefield, Best Minds, Inc is a registered investment advisor that looks to the best minds in the world of finance and economics to seek a direction for our clients. To be a true advocate to our clients, we have found it necessary to go well beyond the norms in financial planning today. We are avid readers. In our study of the markets, we research general history, financial and economic history, fundamental and technical analysis, and mass and individual psychology. Copyright © 2005-2009 Best Minds Inc. Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com ADVERTISEMENTS
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