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Germany's return as world's top creditor may be fleeting: Mike Dolan
Germany's return as world's top creditor may be fleeting: Mike Dolan

Zawya

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Zawya

Germany's return as world's top creditor may be fleeting: Mike Dolan

LONDON - Germany is reprising its role as the world's biggest creditor for the first time since 1991 - but seismic global policy changes suggest it might not be back in the seat for long. As the United States has soaked up the vast bulk of global savings over the past two decades, the stability of ballooning global trade and investment imbalances has become one of the biggest market issues - especially now, as trade wars unfold. For everyone plotting the map, Japan's Ministry of Finance this week recorded a remarkable milestone. For the first time in 34 years, Germany overtook Japan last year as the biggest net provider of investment capital to the rest of the globe. While exchange rates had something to do with the ranking switch, Germany's unenviable top spot - borne of weak growth and a lack of investment opportunities at home - speaks volumes about the state of world savings, investment and demographics. The three top net creditors - Germany, Japan and China - have one major thing in common. They are all large aging economies where populations have already peaked and are set to decline over the remainder of the century - dampening domestic demand in the process and generating outsized savings pools. But, as Deutsche Bank Chief Economist Robin Winkler points out, the German and Japanese investment positions are quite different in nature. Much to the chagrin of U.S. President Donald Trump's new administration, both countries have run chronic trade surpluses with the United States and the rest of the world for years, relying on exports for growth amid depressed local demand. And they have both banked the lion's share of the resulting savings into overseas investments, mostly in the faster-growing America. In the process, these flows generated more than a decade of U.S. asset booms and dollar appreciation - something Trump's team claim had clobbered U.S. manufacturing competitiveness and eliminated good-paying jobs in the process. Trade tariffs will help to redress the imbalance, according to Trump, and so too would a weaker dollar. FICKLE OR STICKY? But Winkler points out that much of the rise in Japan's surpluses over the years has been in direct investments - company acquisitions, new overseas plants and job creation. Unlike Japan, Germany's trade surpluses have been mostly recycled into portfolio investments such as stocks and bonds - making them far less "sticky" and easily reversed. For Germany, this could be a double-edged sword. "It makes Germany more susceptible to criticism that its trade surpluses vis-à-vis certain countries have not directly generated jobs in these countries," Winkler wrote, adding this could be a problem in trade talks under way. "On the other hand, the low share of direct investment makes Germany's net asset position more liquid and fungible than Japan's," he added. "This should be an advantage at a time of geopolitical fragmentation as it is easier to reallocate or even repatriate foreign assets quickly should it become necessary." Of course, the flipside of Trump's trade and diplomatic wars in Europe this year has been a transformative fiscal boost in Germany aimed at both re-arming and rebuilding the economy - changing its domestic growth trajectory as well as potential choice of investment destination for its savers. Capital needs in Europe are rising fast and incentives for savers and investors to stay at home will come with that. This creates substantial risks for Wall Street - and not just dollar depreciation, which the administration appears to be encouraging. While Japanese investors make up the single biggest group of overseas investors in U.S. government bonds, Europe was the source of $7 trillion of overseas equity investment since 2012. As the past week revealed, the stakes in U.S.-European trade talks - which now only have six weeks to square numerous thorny issues - are very high on both sides of the Atlantic. The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters (By Mike Dolan; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

Germany overtakes Japan as world top creditor for first time since 1991, China places third
Germany overtakes Japan as world top creditor for first time since 1991, China places third

Malay Mail

time27-05-2025

  • Business
  • Malay Mail

Germany overtakes Japan as world top creditor for first time since 1991, China places third

TOKYO, May 27 — Japan has lost its position as the world's top creditor after 34 years, falling behind Germany, even as its net external assets last year hit a record high, officials said Tuesday. Japan's net external assets as of the end of last year stood at 533.05 trillion yen (US$3.7 trillion), up 12.9 percent from a year earlier, according to data released by the finance ministry. That, however, was below Germany's 569.65 trillion yen, meaning Japan lost the top spot it has held since 1991, the finance ministry said. The government played down the development. 'Net external assets are determined by the accumulation of various factors, including changes in the prices of financial assets and debts as well as the balance of payments,' spokesman Yoshimasa Hayashi said. 'In light of these points and the fact that Japan's net foreign assets have been steadily increasing, we do not believe that the change in ranking alone should be taken as a sign of a major change in Japan's position,' Hayashi told reporters. Mainland China remained in third place with 516.28 trillion yen, followed by Hong Kong's 320.26 trillion yen and Norway's 271.83 trillion yen according to the ministry's data. For Japan, a weaker yen contributed to increases in both foreign assets and liabilities, but assets grew at a faster pace, driven in part by expanded business investment abroad, according to the data. — AFP

Japan loses world's top creditor status to Germany
Japan loses world's top creditor status to Germany

NHK

time27-05-2025

  • Business
  • NHK

Japan loses world's top creditor status to Germany

Japan is no longer the world's top creditor. That title goes to Germany, after Japan slipped from the number-one spot for the first time in 34 years, even with its net overseas assets at a record high. The Finance Ministry says the net figure at the end of last year increased almost 13 percent to 533.5 trillion yen, or over 3.7 trillion dollars. Germany comes in at 569.6 trillion yen. The country continues to post trade surpluses and now has the world's largest net overseas assets in yen terms. China is third after Japan. The figure is calculated by subtracting the value of assets held in a country by foreign entities from the value of assets the country's government, companies and individuals own abroad. Japan's overseas assets stand at 1,659 trillion yen, or over 11.6 trillion dollars. Japanese businesses stepped up their direct investment in the United States and the Netherlands. A weaker yen boosted the assets' value in yen terms. Japan's overseas liabilities also rose, up for a sixth straight year to 1,125 trillion yen, or about 7.9 trillion dollars. 2024 was also the sixth year in a row for Japan's net overseas assets to hit a record high.

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