Overseas investors turn bearish on Japanese equities after brutal sell-off

Following next year’s turbulence, global investors are reevaluating the viability of yen-funded trades and the economic prospects of once-favoured Chinese stocks.

Up until this quarter, using low yen to purchase shares on the Nikkei was a popular industry. Since the start of 2023, the Nikkei catalog has doubled, and companies have benefited from higher returns from a weakened yen.

That trade is being turned on its head by unexpected fluctuations in the Japanese yen, Bank of Japan ( BOJ) rate increases, doubts about Japan Inc’s earnings, and worries that the US economy is stalling.

The trading volume for the CSOP Nikkei 225 Daily Double Inverse exchange-traded account, the single ETF outside of Japan that allows negative bet against the Nikkei score, increased during the week ended August 9.

The product’s average daily turnover increased by 20 percent from the past year’s average of about HK$ 1 million per day, which is its highest level since its launch in May of this year, reaching HK$ 257 million.

Buyers are also removing their strong exposure from Japan.

According to Goldman Sachs, global hedge funds dropped Chinese stocks during the August 2 to August 8 week at the fastest rate in more than five years, and even some long-term investors have begun reducing their coverage.

The BOJ’s numerical tightening and a strong yen may be challenges for Chinese shares, said Ben Bennett, head of investment plan for Asia at LGIM, a London-based asset management big.

Before last month, the agency’s multi-asset funds turned thin Japanese stocks, he claimed, adding that they still maintained that weighting despite the tumultuous week.

Japanese stocks had their worst one-day sell-off since 1987 last Monday ( Aug 5 ). A large unwinding of billions of dollars of a well-known yen carry industry that was funding the order of danger assets, including Asian equities, was a result of fears of a US crisis and a shock rate increase in Japan.

Some analysts warn that the sleeping has space to move, given expectations for yen recognition and a rise in the CBOE Volatility Index, despite the uncertainty of the exact size.

The yen has surged from around 162 per dollar in mid-July to roughly 142 per dollar last Monday, its strongest level in seven months.

One of the drivers of the upward trend in Japanese equities will eventually vanish, according to Carlos Casanova, senior economist for Asia at Swiss asset manager UBP, in reference to yen carry trades.

” Now we need to see an improvement in fundamentals, meaning that you need to see upward revisions in earnings. And that’s not going to happen unless we see a recovery in the domestic economy”, he said.

UBP has recently resigned from some positions in Japanese stocks, giving the company a neutral outlook.

As the US interest rate cut trend and the yen’s decline were both predicted, Zuhair Khan, senior portfolio manager at UBP in Tokyo, said trading the Japanese market was getting more difficult.

Markets, meanwhile, are waiting for data due this week on Japanese second-quarter economic growth and US inflation.

” No one wants to act rashly now”, said Steven Leung, a Hong Kong-based executive director at&nbsp, UOB-Kay Hian. Investors should wait for important figures this week to determine whether the sell-off in Japanese stocks is over.