SINGAPORE: Japanese stocks raced to a record peak on Thursday, breaking levels last seen in 1989 during the halcyon days of the bubble economy, as cheap valuations and corporate reforms lure foreign money looking for alternatives to battered Chinese markets. The Nikkei share average rose as high as 39,156.97 points, above the previous intraday all-time peak of 38,957.44 points touched on the final trading day of 1989. On that day, the benchmark index closed at 38,915.87 while on Thursday the Nikkei finished 2.19% higher at 39,098.68. The 34 years it has taken to regain its footing is a record, too, for a major market and is a decade longer than Wall Street took to recoup losses from the 1929 crash and Great Depression.
“For us traders, this marks the arrival of a new era,” said Tsutomu Yamada, senior market analyst at Au Kabucom Securities in Tokyo. “It feels like the stock market is telling us that we’ve finally escaped from deflation and a new world has opened up.”
The index is up almost 17% this year after surging 28% in 2023, when it was the best performing Asian major bourse. The tech-heavy Nasdaq, by comparison, soared 43% last year and is up 6% so far in 2024.
Around 20 traders at brokerage Nomura’s Tokyo trading floor were on their feet moments after afternoon trading opened as the Nikkei broke through its 1989 high. Some clapped while others let out muted cheers alongside a lone “bravo”.
More animated cheers and prolonged applause had broken out in the morning session when the benchmark index broke out above its previous all-time closing high of 38,915.
The Nikkei’s rally has defied a recession in Japan, wars in Europe and the Middle East, a global inflation shock and rising rates worldwide. Trade exposure has helped insulate it from deteriorating domestic demand while a weak currency has boosted exporters’ earnings.
The milestone also finally draws a line under decades of lacklustre performance that had kept global investors away.
“It is hard to overstate the psychological impact to Japanese people of the Nikkei returning, since a generation has never seen that level,” said Richard Kaye, a Japan-based portfolio manager at Comgest.
“The magnetism of the market could draw in unforeseen amounts of domestic liquidity,” he said.
Corporate governance changes in Japan are driving buybacks and unwinding cross-holdings, and foreigners are now spurring the rally with the likes of large investment from Warren Buffett in 2020 putting the spotlight on attractive valuations.
Foreign investors poured in 6.3 trillion yen ($42 billion) in the equity market last year. They spent a net 1.16 trillion yen in Japanese equities in January.
A robust earnings season and a falling yen, which is back near 150 per dollar level, as well as expectations that the Bank of Japan will stick with ultra-easy monetary policy for a while yet have supercharged the market at the start of 2024.
Bank of America’s Asia fund manager survey for February showed “optimism on Japan remains unscathed.”
Nearly one out of three participants expected double-digit returns from Japan’s stock market in the next 12 months. “It is, by far, the favourite market in the region,” BofA analysts said, with fund managers tilting toward semiconductor and bank stocks.
A Reuters poll published on Feb. 22 showed analysts had raised year-end forecasts from 35,000 in November to now expect the Nikkei at 39,000 at the end of 2024. Flows in the derivative market though points to a potential interruption in short-term momentum.
The Nikkei’s lofty heights recall the boom years of the 1980s and memories of the collapse in the market and other assets that ushered in deflation and Japan’s “lost decade,” scarring a generation of investors.
Fast-forward three decades later, there is far less froth now and no portents of an imminent crisis with inflation running at just above 2% and corporate earnings booming even though the economy slipped into recession at the end of last year.
Uniqlo-owner Fast Retailing Co, chip tester Advantest Corp and chip tool maker Tokyo Electron are some of the firms behind the rally, compared to banking and real estate stocks three decades ago.
“It was extremely expensive in ’89/90. It is still reasonable this time,” said Junichi Inoue, head of Japanese equities at Janus Henderson
Japanese stocks’ forward price-to-earnings ratio, a common metric of valuation, went north of 50 in the bubble era, and is currently at 20.5 for the Nikkei, compared with 25 for Nasdaq and 20.4 for S&P 500 index, according to Refinitiv data.
“For us traders, this marks the arrival of a new era,” said Tsutomu Yamada, senior market analyst at Au Kabucom Securities in Tokyo. “It feels like the stock market is telling us that we’ve finally escaped from deflation and a new world has opened up.”
The index is up almost 17% this year after surging 28% in 2023, when it was the best performing Asian major bourse. The tech-heavy Nasdaq, by comparison, soared 43% last year and is up 6% so far in 2024.
Around 20 traders at brokerage Nomura’s Tokyo trading floor were on their feet moments after afternoon trading opened as the Nikkei broke through its 1989 high. Some clapped while others let out muted cheers alongside a lone “bravo”.
More animated cheers and prolonged applause had broken out in the morning session when the benchmark index broke out above its previous all-time closing high of 38,915.
The Nikkei’s rally has defied a recession in Japan, wars in Europe and the Middle East, a global inflation shock and rising rates worldwide. Trade exposure has helped insulate it from deteriorating domestic demand while a weak currency has boosted exporters’ earnings.
The milestone also finally draws a line under decades of lacklustre performance that had kept global investors away.
“It is hard to overstate the psychological impact to Japanese people of the Nikkei returning, since a generation has never seen that level,” said Richard Kaye, a Japan-based portfolio manager at Comgest.
“The magnetism of the market could draw in unforeseen amounts of domestic liquidity,” he said.
Corporate governance changes in Japan are driving buybacks and unwinding cross-holdings, and foreigners are now spurring the rally with the likes of large investment from Warren Buffett in 2020 putting the spotlight on attractive valuations.
Foreign investors poured in 6.3 trillion yen ($42 billion) in the equity market last year. They spent a net 1.16 trillion yen in Japanese equities in January.
A robust earnings season and a falling yen, which is back near 150 per dollar level, as well as expectations that the Bank of Japan will stick with ultra-easy monetary policy for a while yet have supercharged the market at the start of 2024.
Bank of America’s Asia fund manager survey for February showed “optimism on Japan remains unscathed.”
Nearly one out of three participants expected double-digit returns from Japan’s stock market in the next 12 months. “It is, by far, the favourite market in the region,” BofA analysts said, with fund managers tilting toward semiconductor and bank stocks.
A Reuters poll published on Feb. 22 showed analysts had raised year-end forecasts from 35,000 in November to now expect the Nikkei at 39,000 at the end of 2024. Flows in the derivative market though points to a potential interruption in short-term momentum.
The Nikkei’s lofty heights recall the boom years of the 1980s and memories of the collapse in the market and other assets that ushered in deflation and Japan’s “lost decade,” scarring a generation of investors.
Fast-forward three decades later, there is far less froth now and no portents of an imminent crisis with inflation running at just above 2% and corporate earnings booming even though the economy slipped into recession at the end of last year.
Uniqlo-owner Fast Retailing Co, chip tester Advantest Corp and chip tool maker Tokyo Electron are some of the firms behind the rally, compared to banking and real estate stocks three decades ago.
“It was extremely expensive in ’89/90. It is still reasonable this time,” said Junichi Inoue, head of Japanese equities at Janus Henderson
Japanese stocks’ forward price-to-earnings ratio, a common metric of valuation, went north of 50 in the bubble era, and is currently at 20.5 for the Nikkei, compared with 25 for Nasdaq and 20.4 for S&P 500 index, according to Refinitiv data.