The yen has been sidelined this week. It is flat against the dollar. Japanese stocks
and bonds are also little changed. The benchmark 10-year bond yield has
fallen by less than two bp on the week, the least among the major bond
markets.
The Nikkei is
off 0.3% on the week, which is the second best performance in the G7 behind
Italy's 0.2% rise. Although the BOJ equity buying is focused on the large-cap stocks, the smaller cap stocks continue to outperform.
This week the JASDAQ and TSE
Mothers Index rose 0.7% and 0.9% respectively.
We had noted
that Prime Minister Abe spent some of his political capital to push through
controversial reforms that permit a larger international role for Japan's
Self-Defense Forces. It is these issues that fire Abe's passion, but the economy had to be addressed first. It is not clear that
the economy has turned the corner though
officials say it has. While China and Europe reported disappointing flash
PMIs, Japan preliminary PMI rose to 51.4 from 50.1, which was also well above
market expectations, there is some concern that the Japanese economy stagnated
in Q2 or worse.
Support for
Abe's cabinet has fallen 10 percentage
points to 37.7% over the past month. The military agenda and the spending
overruns on the new national stadium (for
the 2020 Olympics) have undermined
support. However, there are three
events on the near-term horizon that may bolster Abe's support. First,
next month Abe is expected to deliver a big visionary speech commemorating the
end of WWII. Second, the first nuclear plant is expected to come back
online since they were all shut following the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear
accident in 2011. Third, Abe may visit China in September and a meeting
with President Xi.
It is not clear
how much Abe's speech can rebuild confidence in the government. The restarting of the nuclear plant is also
controversial. Moreover, given
China's criticism of Abe and his nationalistic policies, the meeting with
President Xi could be canceled. Nevertheless, as long as the cabinet's
support remains above 30%, the pressure
is likely to be modest. A loss of 20% is
seen as more serious and a
potential threat to Abe's tenure. Abe is also fortunate that there are no
compelling rivals either within the LDP or opposition parties. If there
are not major programmatic differences,
it is difficult for a challenger to arise.
Meanwhile, more
economic work needs to be done. As Abe shifts his focus to his
political agenda, the IMF calls on renewing his economic agenda. The IMF warned yesterday that
unless additional fiscal measures are introduced, Japan's debt-to-GDP may rise
toward 300% over the next 15 years. It is critical of Japan's reliance on
optimistic economic assumptions to achieve a primary budget surplus by 2020.
Fitch expressed similar concerns when it downgraded Japan's credit rating
in April. The IMF also warned that the BOJ may have to provide more
stimulus if it is going to achieve its inflation target in the medium-term.
The IMF noted
that when adjusted for inflation and trade, the yen is "moderately"
below long-term equilibrium. By the OECD's measure of purchasing
power parity the yen is about 17.7% below fair value, second among the majors
to the euro (-17.8%). This is the "cheapest" the yen has been
according to the OECD since at least 1985. In 2011, the OECD estimated
the yen was 30% over-valued.
Japan's
economic data releases are often concentrated
at the end of the month. Next week brings retail sales,
industrial output, employment, household spending and CPI. The data is expected to be broadly mixed, with
softness in retail sales (after a 1.9% rise in May) and better industrial
production (after a 2.1% decline in May). The
employment report is expected to be
little changed.
The most
important reports are the household
spending and inflation. Both are likely to have slowed
sequentially. Spending is expected to have slowed to a 1.9%
year-over-year pace from 4.8% in May. The Bloomberg consensus expects headline
and core (which excludes fresh food but includes energy) to have slipped by
0.1% for the nation in June and for Tokyo
in July. If so, the year-over-year core rate for Japan and Tokyo would be zero.
The more recent decline in oil prices (and other commodities) will
do the BOJ's effort to lift inflation no favors.
The dollar has
been confined to about a 3/4 yen range this week between JPY123.75 and
JPY124.50. Three-month implied yen volatility neared the lows for the year
earlier this week before ticking higher in the second half of the week. Even though the dollar looks at risk against the yen
given the pullback in stocks and US bond yields, short-term participants are
unlikely to want to get too short ahead of the FOMC meeting next week and the
following week's US jobs report. Over the medium and longer terms, dollar pullbacks will likely be
seen as better buying opportunities for investors.
disclaimer
Japan, Abe and the Yen
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
July 24, 2015
Rating: