Japan’s Corporate Reforms Create a Catalyst for Equity Returns

Corporate reform in Japan is accelerating efforts to streamline businesses, boost profitability and unlock value. Equity investors may find that Japanese governance improvements offer a roadmap to return potential that is less vulnerable to uncertainty over trade and macroeconomic growth.

It’s not hard to conjure up the stereotype of a Japanese listed company. After decades of stagnant domestic economics, many Japanese firms stopped borrowing and hoarded cash. Earnings from profitable business segments often subsidized unprofitable legacy operations and long-term research projects to safeguard pensions for existing directors and employees.

High Barriers to Reform

Reforming corporate Japan is a Herculean task. Many Japanese companies were protected from activist shareholders by multi-generational cross-shareholdings with other large Japanese corporates as well as a historically tolerant and passive regulatory culture. Entrenched boards could protect entrenched management teams, leaving disgruntled shareholders with little recourse. For years, in Japan’s zero-interest-rate environment, ultra-low funding costs discouraged change. As a result, most Japanese companies delivered the lowest returns on equity (ROE) of all developed markets.

That legacy is still evident today. While Japan is cheap on price-to-book ratios, its low ROE at 8.5% means the market is expensive on quality measures (Display). At the opposite end of the spectrum, the US market defines the efficient frontier that investors should pay for high-quality fundamentals.

Price Quality graph

Corporate Governance Practices Are Changing

But Japan’s perpetually low profitability is poised to change. Positive catalysts include improving growth and higher inflation, which have lifted interest rates and the cost of capital. Most importantly, structural and regulatory reforms of corporate governance practices—with a focus on improving ROE for shareholders—have created new domestic momentum for improvement.