Japanese investors dramatically increased the
export of their savings in May. It was the second consecutive month
that Japanese investors were net buyers of foreign stocks and bonds having been
net sellers the previous four months.
Japanese investors bought JPY2.98 trillion of
foreign assets. This is roughly 60% of the total portfolio investment
they have made over the past 12-months (JPY4.93 trillion). In the
12-month period ending May 2013, Japanese investors were net sellers of JPY1.83
trillion of foreign stocks and bonds.
Japanese investors have a clear preference for
foreign bonds over stocks. Japanese investors bought JPY2.5 trillion
of foreign bonds in May and JPY5.7 trillion over the past 12 months. This
compares with JPY4.26 bln of foreign bonds bought in the 12-month period
ending May 2013.
With balance of payments data released earlier
today, the Ministry of Finance provided a country breakdown of its purchases.
Japanese investors bought JPY1 trillion of US notes and bonds in
May. This is the most since last November. Over the 12-month period
ending in May, they bought JPY7.4 trillion. In the year ago period,
Japanese investors had sold JPY6.8 trillion of US notes and bonds.
Japanese investors were even larger buyers of
French notes and bonds. They bought JPY1.93 trillion worth of French
paper. This appears to be the most since at least 2005 when the current
time series began. This is the lion's share of the JPY2.6 trillion bought
over the past 12-months. In the 12-months through May 2013, Japanese
investors had bought JPY3.54 trillion of French paper.
French fundamentals are considerably worse
than Germany's. There is a deep seated sense among Japanese
investors, as well as other large pools of capital, including reserve managers
and sovereign wealth funds in Asia, that given the political considerations,
French bonds are as as good as bunds and pay a modest premium to boot.
Indeed it appears that Japanese investors have
switched from German bunds to French bonds. They sold nearly JPY983
bln of German bunds in May and JPY3.9 trillion in the 12-month period. In
the 12-months through May 2013, Japanese investors bought JPY880 bln of German
bunds.
We argue that the spur of reform for German
was the fall of the Berlin Wall and the challenges of reunification.
It took some time for what the Economist called the "sick man" of
Europe to recognize what it had to do. The financial crisis is forcing
the periphery of Europe to reform at different speeds and in different
ways. France has had the luxury of neither. The demand for French
bonds eases some of the pressure on France to reform.
Japanese investors had been sellers of
Canadian and Australian notes and bonds in the 12-month period ending May 2013
(JPY132 bln and JPY1.19 trillion respectively). However, they have
returned to those markets. Japanese investors bought JPY131 bln of
Canadian notes and bonds in May to bring the 12-month figure to JPY635
bln. Japanese investors bought JPY107 bln of Australian bonds in May and
JPY760 bln for the 12-month period.
The weekly MOF data for June suggests that
Japan's appetite for foreign bonds remained strong. The
data, for which a country breakdown is not provided, shows Japanese investors
bought JPY2.4 trillion of foreign bonds June . This time series in not
directly comparable with the monthly BOP series, but the weekly data points to
an even stronger appetite for foreign bonds that in May.
Japan Goes on a Shopping Spree, but No Appetite for German Bunds
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
July 08, 2014
Rating: