Investment Strategies
As Japan Pushes For Higher Shareholder Returns, Rest Of Asia Follows – Cambridge Associates
The report from the investment firm sets out prospects and trends for public and private markets in Asia.
Listed companies in the Asia-Pacific region are increasingly
focusing on raising shareholder returns, and more firms are
hiking dividend payouts and repurchasing shares, Cambridge
Associates, an investment house, says in a new
report.
“This trend comes amid a market rotation toward high
dividend–yielding companies, as investors seek stable income
returns, given rising uncertainty and overvaluations in certain
segments of the market,” the firm said in its Asia Insights
report.
At the end of May this year, Reuters reported that
Chinese-listed companies are rushing to buy back shares and lift
dividends as they respond to regulators' calls that echo reform
efforts in Japan and South Korea. China-listed firms
announced record cash dividends totaling RMB2.2
trillion ($300 billion) for 2023 despite a fall in combined
profit, official data shows. Over 100 listed companies returned
money to investors for the first time, the report said.
In January, the Tokyo Stock Exchange issued a list of firms
that have disclosed plans to increase their capital efficiency, a
move aimed at raising Japanese valuations and attracting
overseas investors. The market and Japanese authorities have
pushed to improve governance at listed companies.
The CA report said such measures had proven their worth.
“In Japan, driven by regulatory changes and increased shareholder
activism, has led this shift. Reforms introduced by the Tokyo
Stock Exchange in January 2023 have put pressure on Japanese
companies that trade below book value to take action to narrow
their valuation discount, largely through increasing dividends
and conducting shares repurchases,” Wilson Chen, managing
director, public equities at CA, said in the report. “Such
measures have helped to boost Japanese companies’
return-on-equity and supported upward stock price revaluations,
creating positive tailwinds for the market. The small-cap segment
could see greater benefits from reforms, given wider valuation
discounts.”
Chen argued that in South Korea and China, similar efforts are
now being observed.
“South Korea’s ‘Corporate Value-up Program’ seeks to improve
capital efficiency and equity valuations of firms through the
voluntary disclosure of plans to enhance shareholder value. In
China, more firms are responding to regulatory calls to increase
dividends and share buybacks and others are re-listing on more
favorable exchanges or spinning off units to unlock value and
boost investor confidence,” Chen said.
Source: Cambridge Associates
As this publication has noted before, moves by Japanese firms to
unlock large surpluses of cash on their balance sheets have been
a factor behind
rising stocks in the country, although returns to
non-Japanese investors have been blunted by the weakening yen
rate versus the dollar.
Private credit
In the private credit space, CA said capital has “rotated away”
from China and toward developed markets such as Australia
and South Korea, while India also remains a destination for
capital.
“Broadly, the Asia private credit market remains underpenetrated
and is less crowded but poised for growth, presenting an
interesting opportunity for investors to gain a diversified
exposure,” the report said.
Turning to India, the report noted that venture capital is
starting to “look more attractive today given a favorable
macroeconomic backdrop, an improving startup and manager
landscapes, and a broadening of exit channels. In contrast to
India public markets, which have run up and appear frothy, India
VC activity has cooled alongside global VC markets.”
“As a result, India VC valuations are moderating, making now a
more opportune time for investors considering access,” it
said.
Within Chinese private investments as a whole, the report said
fundraising activity “remains frozen” because there
are uncertainties about geopolitical tensions and pending US
investment restrictions.
“However, deal-level opportunities still exist in certain
segments of the market, particularly for buyouts where the
current macro environment is conducive for market consolidation
and control opportunities,” it added.