logo
Japanese investors dump foreign stocks, pile into bonds in July as yen weakens

Japanese investors dump foreign stocks, pile into bonds in July as yen weakens

CNA6 days ago
Japanese investors sold foreign stocks for a third straight month in July, taking profits after a steep rally left valuations stretched, while channelling large sums into higher-yielding foreign bonds as a weakened yen boosted returns.
According to data from Japan's Ministry of Finance released on Friday, Japanese investors withdrew approximately 536.4 billion yen ($3.64 billion) from foreign equities in the month.
They had sold 1.99 trillion yen worth of foreign stocks in the previous month.
Meanwhile, Japanese investors snapped up 3.63 trillion yen worth of foreign bonds in July, marking a third monthly net purchase.
The yen
dipped approximately 4.5 per cent against the dollar last month, the sharpest for a month since December 2024.
Trust accounts (pension funds) sold foreign stocks and bought long-term bonds on a net basis for a third straight month. They divested a net 1.52 trillion yen worth of foreign equities and bought a net 419.6 billion yen worth of long-term bonds.
July's net foreign equity investments by Japanese bankers, investment trust management companies and insurers stood at 445.5 billion yen, 333.5 billion yen and 207.1 billion yen, respectively.
Overseas bond markets received 3.82 trillion yen worth of Japanese investments in long-term bonds. Short-term bills, however, logged a net 196.6 billion yen divestment.
Separate data from the Bank of Japan showed that Japanese market participants bought a net 5.73 trillion yen worth of U.S. bonds in the first half of the year, down from net purchases worth 6.4 trillion yen, a year ago.
They also invested 2.37 trillion yen in European debt securities in the first half. French and German bonds received a significant 702 billion yen and 494 billion yen worth of Japanese net investments.
($1 = 147.3800 yen)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bessent says BOJ is falling behind the curve, expects hike
Bessent says BOJ is falling behind the curve, expects hike

Business Times

timean hour ago

  • Business Times

Bessent says BOJ is falling behind the curve, expects hike

[WASHINGTON] US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the Bank of Japan (BOJ) is falling behind the curve in addressing inflation, in a rare comment admonishing policy decisions by a foreign central bank. 'They're behind the curve,' Bessent told Bloomberg TV on Wednesday (Aug 13), noting that that was his opinion, and that he discussed inflation in Japan with BOJ governor Kazuo Ueda. 'So they're going to be hiking and they need to get their inflation problem under control,' he added. Bessent's comments come as the BOJ continues to have one of the lowest policy rates among major economies, while the nation's key price gauge has remained at or above the bank's 2 per cent target for more than three years. After the BOJ's decision to keep rates on hold last month, Ueda delivered a largely dovish message and avoided committing to a timeline for the next hike. Following the Treasury Secretary's comments, the yen gained against the US dollar on Thursday in Tokyo, while Japanese 10-year yields ticked up. 'Bessent may be trying to weaken the US dollar through his comments on US and Japanese monetary policy,' said Hideo Kumano, executive economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute and a former BOJ official. By commenting on another country's policy, 'he's breaking the rules, and it's possible that this actually makes it more difficult for the BOJ to take action.' A BOJ spokesperson said on Thursday that Bessent and Ueda regularly exchange views at international conferences, but they can't comment on the content or timing of these exchanges. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up In the latest Bloomberg survey of economists watching the BOJ, around 42 per cent of respondents said they expected an increase in borrowing costs in October, with a third expecting a move in January. The BOJ is broadly expected to stand pat when it next sets policy on Sep 19. 'The market had been a bit uncertain whether the BOJ will hike rates this year, but with pressure like this from the US, they'll have to hike,' said Marito Ueda, general manager of the market research department at SBI Liquidity Market. 'I think opinions will start to emerge that the BOJ will hike in December at the latest, and more people may think October.' Bessent has in the past spoken approvingly of BOJ rate hikes, characterising such moves as consistent with economic fundamentals. As a result of stronger domestic data 'the Bank of Japan is raising rates, so all that's natural,' he said in April. 'BOJ policy tightening should continue to proceed in response to domestic economic fundamentals including growth and inflation, supporting a normalisation of the yen's weakness against the US dollar,' the US Treasury said in a statement in June. US President Donald Trump has in the past criticised Japan for its currency policy, claiming Tokyo was seeking an unfair advantage by weakening its currency. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and others have denied those accusations. 'If there is a rate hike by the BOJ right after Bessent's comment, and if the market narrative is tilted towards political pressure, I'll be quite worried,' said Anna Wu, a cross-asset investment strategist at VanEck in Sydney. Such a move would show 'how the US can put pressure on one of the most advanced economies in Asia.' In its latest quarterly economic outlook, the central bank raised its median inflation forecast for the current fiscal year to 2.7 per cent from 2.2 per cent, citing persistent increases in food prices. Projections for fiscal years 2026 and 2027 were also revised upward, suggesting the BOJ is gradually approaching its goal of achieving stable inflation. Data due next week are expected to show Japan's overall inflation gauge registered 3 per cent growth in July. Bessent also said that US bond yields have been affected by trends abroad, including in Japan and Germany. Yields on Japan's super-long bonds have surged to the highest level in decades in recent months, with various auctions showing acutely weak demand. 'This is a global phenomenon,' said Bessent, although he noted that the US 10-year yield is one of the few that are down this year. 'That tells me that there's credibility from Treasury, credibility from the Fed that the inflation expectations are well anchored, but there is definitely 'leakage.'' BLOOMBERG

UK economy grew faster-than-forecast in Q2
UK economy grew faster-than-forecast in Q2

Business Times

timean hour ago

  • Business Times

UK economy grew faster-than-forecast in Q2

[LONDON] The UK economy fared better than expected in the second quarter, bringing some relief for Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves but raising the bar to further interest-rate cuts from the Bank of England. Gross domestic product rose 0.3 per cent, the Office for National Statistics said on Thursday (Aug 14), beating the 0.1 per cent forecast by both private-sector economists and the Bank of England. Output in June alone gained 0.4 per cent – double expectations – following modest declines in the previous two months. The figures suggest the economy held up during what was always expected to be a difficult period as businesses and consumers were hit by Reeves' £26 billion (S$45.2 billion) payroll tax raid, inflation-busting hikes to regulated prices such as energy and increased taxes on home purchases, as well as US President Donald Trump's tariffs. Growth of 0.7 per cent in the first quarter was artificially boosted by manufacturers trying to get ahead of US tariffs, though Prime Minister Keir Starmer repeatedly hailed Britain outperforming the other Group-of-Seven nations as evidence of the economy turning a corner. The data also appear to further muddy the BOE's decision over whether to carry on cutting interest rates from the current 4 per cent after statistics on Tuesday showed the economy has lost fewer jobs than initially thought since Reeves' tax-raising budget last October. Traders are no longer fully pricing in a further reduction this year, and expect borrowing costs to settle at 3.5 per cent next year. BLOOMBERG

South Korea to expand securities settlement hours for global investors
South Korea to expand securities settlement hours for global investors

CNA

timean hour ago

  • CNA

South Korea to expand securities settlement hours for global investors

SEOUL :South Korea will extend operating hours for transaction settlement systems at the central bank and the securities depository starting April 2026, aiming to ease access for foreign investors across different time zones, the finance ministry said on Thursday. The Bank of Korea's operating hours will expand to 9 a.m. and 8 p.m. local time (0000-1100 GMT), from 9 a.m. and 5:30 p.m, aligning closer to those of countries included in FTSE Russell's World Government Bond Index, which South Korea is set to join in April 2026. The measure is the first step taken by the government since forming a task force to upgrade South Korea's domestic stock market to developed-market status from emerging market classification by Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI). Achieving MSCI's developed status remains a long-standing national goal and a key pledge by President Lee Jae Myung.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store