Investors in Japan discount political risk as Abe
troubles mount
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[April 17, 2018]
By Tomo Uetake and Hideyuki Sano
TOKYO (Reuters) - From a rising Nikkei
stock market to falling measures of volatility, there is little in
Japan's financial markets to suggest that this may be a nation on the
verge of a political upheaval.
Public support for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the architect of the
Abenomics brand of reforms that has helped weaken the yen, raised
economic growth levels and lifted corporate profits, is at record lows
as his administration is embroiled in scandals involving suspected
cronyism.
That has drastically reduced the odds of Abe being re-elected leader of
the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in September and becoming
Japan's longest serving prime minister. A popular predecessor even
predicted this week that Abe would probably resign in June.
But investors don't appear to be worried.
"As an investor, I have no plan to do any Abexit trade," said Yasuo
Sakuma, chief investment officer at Libra Investments in Tokyo. He said
most investors are now looking at economic and company prospects rather
than politics to gain an advantage in the market.
The belief among some that Abe has already set in motion an irreversible
economic recovery is behind some of this optimism.
The three-pronged Abenomics platform implemented in 2012, comprising
fiscal expansion, monetary easing, and structural reform, has already
seen the Nikkei stocks index more than double in value. The economy is
growing at its best in three decades and is no longer mired in
deflation.
"The Japanese economy and Japanese corporate earnings have acquired an
independent energy, and do not depend on the maintenance of the Abe
administration," said Richard Kaye, portfolio manager at French asset
management firm Comgest.
There is also an expectation among investors that the policies of
Haruhiko Kuroda, the Bank of Japan governor who was reappointed by Abe
this year and who is seen as the person behind Japan's monetary
stimulus, would survive an Abe exit. And that's even if Kuroda himself
were to depart early.
Relatively cheap valuations and the other cross currents facing Japan
are other reasons investors are disregarding the possibility of an Abe
departure.
Though it is trading close to the 22,000 mark, the Nikkei isn't that
expensive, with a price-to-earnings ratio below 16.
Political and economic risk in Japan could prompt a flight to the safety
of the yen, though the Japanese currency is already up more than 5
percent against the U.S. dollar this year, partly owing to the
increasing threat of trade protectionism.
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Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe attends a lower house budget
committee session at the parliament in Tokyo, Japan, April 11, 2018.
REUTERS/Toru Hanai/File Photo
NO CLEAR SUCCESSOR
The absence of a clear successor to Abe isn't bothering investors
either.
"There is not perhaps that much new in terms of policy that Abe is
offering," said Paul Donovan, global chief economist at UBS Wealth
Management.
"A change in leadership may matter if the next prime minister has a
radically different agenda. But were Abe to resign, that of itself would
not necessarily change existing policy."
A survey by broadcaster Nippon TV released on Sunday showed Abe's
support had sunk to 26.7 percent, the lowest since he took office in
December 2012. An Asahi newspaper poll on Monday put his support at 31
percent.
His possible replacements include former cabinet minister Shigeru Ishiba,
the popular young LDP lawmaker Shinjiro Koizumi who is ex-prime minister
Junichiro Koizumi's son, and former foreign minister Fumio Kishida.
"The prospect of Abe being removed would be negative for markets in the
short term, but the overall policy framework of Abenomics, including the
BOJ, would most likely remain in place," said Jeremy Osborne, an
investment director at Fidelity International in Japan.
The markets reflect that composure.
The Nikkei volatility index, Japan's version of the global risk and volatility
barometer VIX, fell to a 2-1/2-month low this week. The implied volatility on
the dollar-yen currency pair is at its lowest levels in about three months.
But there are some who think there is still a risk of political dislocation in
the near term.
Tetsuro Ii, CEO of asset manager Commons Asset, said foreign investors have
already lightened their Japanese holdings while domestic investors are waiting
and watching.
"But the situation could change as early as early May," Ii said. "Politics can
change quickly once it gets moving. So we need to be careful."
(Additional reporting by Alasdair Pal, Saikat Chatterjee in LONDON; Writing by
Vidya Ranganathan; Editing by Martin Howell)
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