Fund Management
European Funds Smile On Japan's Business, Economic Prospects
One of the – not always loud – financial stories of 2023 so far has been the strong performance of Japanese equities, driven by greater international and domestic awareness that macroeconomic conditions and corporate reforms in the country are supportive.
European funds fell in love with Japanese equities in the
spring this year, with enthusiasm for a revived corporate sector
and improved growth prospects driving inflows.
According to Cerulli
Associates, Japan equity fund flows in Europe turned net
positive in April, registering €500 million ($561 million) of net
new money across mutual funds and exchange-traded funds. In May,
Japan was the second-best equity sector for net new flows, behind
global equity large cap. Active Japan equity funds took in €2.3
billion, while passive flows trailed at €400 million.
Such figures chime with commentaries (see here,
here
and here)
about the positive case for Japan.
“Domestically, GDP growth has been relatively strong and rising
inflation has signalled a change in the country’s economic
fortunes,” Cerulli said. The comments come in The Cerulli
Edge - European Monthly Product Trends. “Internationally,
the fact that Japanese inflation has still lagged levels seen
elsewhere in the developed world – and therefore not yet
triggered the Bank of Japan to raise interest rates – has meant a
weaker yen and greater price competitiveness of exports, as well
as greater opportunities for foreign investment.”
Governance
Corporate governance reforms and increased shareholder activism,
are also unlocking cash stockpiled on Japanese companies’ balance
sheets. A wealth manager recently told this news service that the
Nikkei 225 Index has potential to surge towards the 45,000 mark.
(It is currently 32,682). To put the market's performance in
context, the MSCI Japan Index of equities shows total returns
since the start of January 2023 of 13.25 per cent (capital growth
plus reinvested dividends, in dollars). By comparison, the MSCI
World Index of developed countries' stocks is 13.7 per
cent.
Besides corporate governance changes, Japan’s market has also
been buoyed by the pledge of JPX, the owner of the Tokyo Stock
Exchange, to support measures that improve shareholder value.
Last year, the exchange implemented more stringent listing
standards designed to encourage foreign investment into the
top-tier market, the TSE Prime.
In June, famed US investor Warren Buffett, who’s actions and
comments are closely watched, bought additional shares in Japan’s
five largest trading houses.
In other data, Cerulli said the Japan equity sector saw net
inflows of €4.2 billion into actively managed products through
May and June, compared with €900 million into passive products.
At the start of 2023, 145 asset managers expressed mixed views
about the demand potential of Japan equity funds, the report
said.
“Around a fifth of our managers included Japan in their top three
equity sectors for future demand for active and index mutual
funds (19 per cent and 20 per cent respectively); 29 per cent did
so for ETFs,” Fabrizio Zumbo, director of wealth management
research in Europe, said.
To put the Japan position in context, Cerulli said managers are
more bullish about the global equity, global emerging market, and
China equity sectors. A third (34 per cent) expect China to be
one of the most in-demand equity sectors in the active fund space
for 2023–2024.