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Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Nations on the danger of going under or having economic crisis

Nation building via learning and being the best in business

They are Greece, Saudi, and even Japan.  Let us pray for them.

What is going to be repercussion if they collapse?
Should we be worried about Japan?  Is it karma for them?



How could this happen to Japan?  Japan was my idol in industrialization and sound management






Crisis in Greece due to high debt




Saudi Arabia economy totally dependent on oil revenues is collpsing. The line city is in trouble. The crown prince plan is in shamble

Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Did the carry trade trigger the market sell off? Is Japan taking down the world finances

Looking forward to the future of business

Is this worse than WWII waged by Japan?

There is huge carry trade happening about as some traders estimate to be between $10 to $15 trillion.   Carry trade is just an arbitrage game.   You get low interest rate from Japan say at 0.80% and invest this in US Treasuries at 3.5% and profit from the interest differential.  Or if the yen sinks further, you can earn on the currency too.  However, things can go south as it is now:   Bank of Japan  has raised interest rates, and the Yen price is on the upsurge.   

Thus funds hedge managers are unloading their carry trades because they will be losing with rising Yen exchange rate, and higher interest rates in Japan. 

And probably this is the cause of the sell off -   investors and fund managers getting rid of carry trade portfolio which are now in losing/negative terriroty

That is why:    this post does not advocate paper shuffling business, making money out of other people miseries.   Do business that really generate values for customers for the world like construction, manufacturing, agriculture, construction.  Arbitrage is a zero sum game:  there are losers and winners, gain gained at the expense/hurt of others.





Sunday, September 15, 2013

Japan's economy in bad shape?

Ateneo Professor on Entrepreneurship

Repost from About.com | August 28, 2013

 


Despite our impression that the Japan's economic juggernaut is still on the move (what with the Toyota, Mitsubishi, National, Fuji, Nissan, JVC and more dominating their markets) Japan's economy is in bad shape even before the the 2011 tsunami disaster and Fukushima nuclear power plant problems, economic problems have hobbled Japan since 2008. I got a hint of this when IMF chief in a BBC interview said that Japan is a challenge to them.

I used to admire and absorb all things that are Japanese - management, manufacturing methods, quality etc.

Japan's debt to GDP ratio is 182% (nearly twice) which more than the US.  Unlike US which has dealt agressively with its economic woes (like the QE), Japan is not.

Some economic data on Japan:

1.  Japan's economy shrank .11% in 2011 due to decline in manufacturing output due to lesser electricity generation due to Fukushima problem;

2.  The bank of Japan bought US bonds heavily to make yen competitive, hence the high debt to GDP ratio;

3.  Japan just emerged from a 20 year period of deflation and recession;

4. It has aging population;

5. It is challenged by rising commodity prices:  it has to import much of its food and fuel resources;

Above all, Japan is behind now in entrepreneurship.

Japan as the 4th largest world economy is important to rest of Asian countries as it provides many jobs.  It establishes plants and supply chain for its manufacturing sector for the car and electronics.  And there is the competition from China.

Do you agree with the statement that Japan's economy (and finances) is in trouble?

What could the Japanese government do to reverse the situation?

Is entrepreneurship really a problem in Japan?

So Japayukis and those working for Japanese companies, this not the time to be complacent.  Japan's economy is not so sound as we think it is


                         

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Fwd: The Number One Reason I'm Still Bullish on Japan

The author is still bullish, a believer in Japan despite its difficulties.  Why?

Why am I posting this?

From: Wall Street Daily <wallstreetdaily@wallstreetdaily.com>
Date: Tue, Jun 19, 2012 at 6:17 PM
Subject: The Number One Reason I'm Still Bullish on Japan




Wall Street Daily
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The Number One Reason I'm Still Bullish on Japan
By Louis Basenese, Chief Investment Strategist

Louis Basenese "Japan has pretty much been in the doghouse since the market began its selloff more than 20 years ago. Local and foreign investors have lost confidence in the country, its political management and, worse, its future as an investment hub."
- Ed Merner, Japan-based money manager

I'd say that's a pretty accurate assessment. Nevertheless, against such a discouraging backdrop, I wrote in December 2011: "It might finally be time to go 'all in' on Japanese stocks."

Crazy call? It didn't look like it for the first three months of 2012. During that period, both of Japan's benchmark indexes - the Nikkei 225 and Topix - rallied about 20%.

Since then, however, well, I don't look that smart. Japanese stocks have given back almost all of their gains, thanks in large part to a stubbornly strong yen.

But that's not about to change my conviction. Japan remains a screaming "Buy."

Here's why we need to have an ounce of patience when it comes to Japan, though, as well as the type of stocks we should be buying to capitalize on the opportunity for maximum gains...

A No-Brainer Value Trade

As I revealed in February, Japanese stocks are obscenely cheap compared to U.S. stocks.

Back then, they were essentially selling for $0.63 on the dollar, based on price-to-book ratios. And that's still the case. Take a look:



So betting on Japan is undeniably a bet on undervalued securities. It's a value investment. And a smart one at that.

Study after study proves that value investments outperform so-called growth investments. By a wide margin.

Consider the latest decile analysis out of the Brandes Institute: From 1968 to 2010, the most undervalued U.S. stocks returned an average of 15.6% per year, versus a 6.5% gain for the most hyped growth stocks.

What's more, unlike previous studies, Brandes went on to prove that "the overall pattern of substantial value stock outperformance persisted" across valuation metrics, across time, across regions and across market capitalizations.

In other words, the outperformance of value stocks isn't just a U.S. phenomenon. It's a global phenomenon.

Of particular interest to our discussion, it also happens to be a phenomenon that's particularly strong in Japan.

From 1980 to 2010, the most undervalued Japanese stocks returned an average of 11.4%, versus 1.7% for the most hyped Japanese growth stocks. That's a performance difference of 571%, which compares favorably to a performance difference of 140% between U.S. growth and value stocks.

There's a catch to all this upside, though: time. Five years' worth to be exact. And therein lies the problem...

Most investors aren't that patient. They typically only hold stocks for about six months.

So, considering it's been about six months since I first made my contrarian call to buy Japan - if you acted on that advice - you're probably getting an itchy trigger finger. But don't bail yet. More than 40 years' worth of investment returns suggests that's precisely the wrong move.

Bet Small, Not Large

If anything, we should treat the recent selloff in Japan as a buying opportunity. Don't just buy any old Japanese stock, though.

Stick with small caps. Here are three reasons why:

  • Limited Currency Exposure: Since small-cap stocks primarily serve the domestic market, a strong yen doesn't significantly hamper their profitability. They don't rely heavily on exports.
  • Better Bargains: As Merner told Barron's recently, large-cap Japanese stocks are currently trading at a slight premium to book value, whereas Japanese small caps are trading at about a 30% discount.
  • Strongest Performers: Based on Brandes' research, small-cap value stocks in Japan perform better than large-cap value stocks, returning almost one percentage point more per year. That might not seem like a lot, but 1% per year adds up.
If you need some extra encouragement to buy Japan, remember what I shared in February: Institutional money managers - the so-called "smart" money - are changing their minds on Japan. They're stepping up to buy after years of completely avoiding the country.

Either they're just as crazy as I am. Or they realize, like Merner says, "It's a great time for bargain hunters." Indeed!

Bottom line: Every investor loves to buy assets on the cheap, yet very few investors realize profiting from cheap assets requires time. So step up, be contrarian and buy Japanese small-cap stocks. And be patient.

Ahead of the tape,


Louis Basenese

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