The Fundamentals of Japan

Key Takeaways

  • The changing global macro landscape is bringing more market volatility but we believe the fundamentals of Japanese equities are strong and resilient.
  • Japanese companies’ earnings profiles are generally healthy and their ability to increase dividends and buybacks, funded by better capital allocation discipline, remains.
  • Market volatility can be navigated provided that investors have exposure to companies which offer defensive strengths as well as the ingredients for long-term growth.
  • In our view, Japan’s investment potential is sector-agnostic with opportunities for alpha generation across cyclical, defensive and growth stocks, and in secular trends.

Many investors understandably are wondering where Japan’s equity markets are heading. The market had a good year through June. After that it changed. The Bank of Japan's hawkishly delivered interest rate increase on July 31 preceded the release of weak U.S. economic data. These combined to trigger an unexpected unwinding of Japanese yen carry trades which in turn wreaked havoc across global equity markets, particularly in Japan. The Nikkei 225, or the Nikkei Stock Average, fell 12.4% on Aug. 5, its biggest decline since the day after the U.S. Black Monday crash in 1987.

Japanese equities recovered much of their losses in August, but volatility remains. Soft U.S. economic data and ongoing concerns over sustainability of the artificial intelligence (AI) boom continue to trigger sharp equity movements and with it a strengthening in the yen. And, in our view, investors’ focus on macro issues looks likely to remain. Japan’s central bank has telegraphed that more rate rises can be expected which may further strengthen the yen while a U.S. interest rate-cutting cycle and a falling dollar could negatively impact sentiment toward Japanese exporters. Moreover, if economic indicators begin to suggest growing weakness in the U.S. economy, bigger concerns may gather over a slowdown in global trade upon which Japan is highly dependent.

Lost in Translation

So how does all this shape the prospects for Japanese equities? The first point to make is that while domestic and international market landscapes and macro environments are important and can negatively and positively impact investor sentiment, we know as experienced investors that a company’s fundamentals play a critical role in providing resilience and growth traits to help generate investment returns. So while Japan’s equity markets are sensitive to macro developments and are experiencing a period of volatility, the strong fundamentals of Japanese equities have helped to support the market this year. Year-to-date, in yen terms, the MSCI Japan Index has delivered a total return of 16.9%, and in USD terms, it has delivered 12.59% through Aug. 31.

We also often hear concerns that Japanese equities are too reliant on the export sector and that rising interest rates and a strengthening yen inevitably hurt earnings. However, we believe this correlation is less strong today. Exports have been, and still are, a significant component of Japan’s economy but currency sensitivity has almost halved over the past two decades as more Japanese manufacturers have built out capacity overseas and are delivering product to customers locally. An increasing part of Japan’s corporate currency sensitivity represents a “translation” of local currency rather than a “transactional” cost implying a change of competitiveness.

Japanese exporters are also relatively unlevered versus global peers and have limited variable rate exposure. So, in our view, interest rate rises in Japan wouldn’t dramatically change the cash flow allocation to debt or hinder growth investments like R&D, CapEx and M&A.