Japan's Nomura sees
opportunities from Trump's pro-business agenda
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[December 29, 2016]
By Thomas Wilson and Emi Emoto
TOKYO
(Reuters) - Nomura Holdings Inc sees opportunities in the pro-business
stance of U.S. president-elect Donald Trump, though his protectionist
tilt brings uncertainty to the global economy, said the chief of Japan's
biggest brokerage and investment bank.
Japanese shares have gained since the New York billionaire's Nov. 8
election, spurred by Wall Street where investors are betting Trump's
support of deregulation and infrastructure spending could boost the U.S.
economy.
"The market expects business and economy-friendly policies," CEO Koji
Nagai told Reuters. "Clients will have to rebalance portfolios, in both
Japan and America. That's a chance for us."
Investors shifting funds to riskier assets such as shares would be a
boon for Nomura's equity trading arm, while increased business activity
will benefit its advisory and equity and bond underwriting divisions,
Nagai said.
Nomura earned over half of April-September overseas pretax profit in the
Americas, where it is shifting focus to client-oriented services from
market-based trading.
TRUMP BARRIERS
But Trump has spoken of measures to protect U.S. businesses at the
expense of foreign interests, including pulling the U.S. out of the
North American Free Trade Agreement and Trans-Pacific Partnership trade
pact, and imposing tariffs on some imports.
Any such measures could have a detrimental effect on trade, Nagai said -
something likely to limit opportunities for financial firms such as
Nomura.
"If the U.S. adopts a protectionist trade policy, it won't have a good
impact on the global economy," Nagai said.
While it is difficult to gauge the costs of policies that impede
cross-border trade and investment, Trump's protectionism could have an
adverse impact on Japan's export-heavy economy, a Reuters poll showed
this month.
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Nomura Holdings' Chief Executive Officer Koji Nagai poses for
pictures after an interview with Reuters in Tokyo, Japan, February
9, 2016.REUTERS/Yuya Shino/File Photo
BREXIT MOVES
In Europe, Nomura and its peers face the possibility of losing so-called
passporting rights that allow them to provide services across the
European Union (EU) from bases in Britain following the latter's vote to
withdraw from the bloc.
Some are considering shifting operations to EU cities such as Paris,
Frankfurt, Dublin and Amsterdam.
Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc <8316.T>, Japan's third-largest
banking group, last week said it was studying sites for a new banking
headquarters in Europe.
For Nomura, Nagai said such moves would be costly, and that he was
"considering options for every scenario".
Daiwa Securities Group Inc <8601.T>, Japan's second-biggest brokerage by
revenue, said it was examining setting up a base within the euro zone
should it lose passporting rights.
Daiwa's European arm accounts for only a small share of its overall
business, so any Brexit impact would be small, it said.
"We are studying various things, including establishing a new base on
the continent," CEO Takashi Hibino said, citing locations such as
Frankfurt, Dublin and Paris.
(Reporting by Thomas Wilson and Emi Emoto; Editing by Christopher
Cushing)
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