A word of caution to those thinking Japan's economy has turned the corner because of its efforts to drop the value of the yen by about 17 percent since mid-November. On July 29th BBC reported that industrial output fell 3.3% in June, from the previous month. Compared with the same month a year ago it fell 4.8%. More surprising was the 0.4% decline in household spending from a year earlier. Analysts had expected growth of 1.0%. Japan has been trying to boost domestic consumption in an attempt to revive its stagnant economy. While the data was weak and highlighted
the challenges faced by the government, it was not a cause for immediate
concern that Japan has again turned downward.
The thought is while falling consumer prices may sound good, they tend to
hurt the economy as consumers and businesses put off big purchases in
the hope of getting a better deal later on. In response Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's
government has unveiled a series of aggressive measures to boost
domestic demand and end deflation, many policymakers and analysts have said that ending the deflationary cycle is key to reviving Japan's economy. Even with a falling yen analysts said it was too early to declare the end of deflation. If you look at a narrower basket of goods without energy a clear rising trend isn't there. Koichi Fujishiro, from Dai-ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo said "Only when wages start going up will we be able to say that
it's a more sustainable and meaningful trend. So far, it can still end
on a short blip up."
Meanwhile data showed that consumer prices, excluding food recently jumped by 0.4% - the biggest increase for five years. The rise was mainly due to higher energy bills rather than increased domestic demand. Japan has suffered a shortage of energy since the closing of
almost all the country's nuclear reactors, which followed the earthquake
and tsunami in 2011. As a result, it has been importing much of the
energy it needs. Since becoming prime minister late last year, Mr. Abe has
looked to decrease the value of the yen with government spending and
ultra-loose monetary policy, in order to help boost exporters' earnings. However, the weaker yen means it is more costly to import fuel and other commodities into the resource poor country.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has introduced a set
of policies called “Abenomics”. These policies focus in three key areas: massive fiscal stimulus,
aggressive monetary policy similar to that of America's Federal Reserve’s QE’s 1-3, and improving the competitiveness of the Japanese economy. It will take many years to greatly
improve the competitiveness of the Japanese economy, so for the next few years Abenomics
has to rely mainly on fiscal stimulus and aggressive monetary policy. Will Abenomics, with its main focus in more
aggressive buying of assets by the Bank of Japan (BOJ) and expanding the money supply be successful in increasing the
economy’s growth rate?
With this program Japan has pulled a page from Ben Bernanke's playbook and plans to copy the Fed’s large-scale asset
purchases in an effort to
get the economy rolling again.
QE1 was introduced during the early days of the crisis as the Fed attempted to prevent the
American economy from slipping into a very serious depression. While most economists believe that QE1 was
extremely important in providing liquidity to the American banking
system at a
time when liquidity was in scarce supply many have doubts about
the
efficacy of QE2 and QE3 that further increased bank reserves, and
lowered long-term interest rates even further.
Despite the aggressive
action of the Fed
the recovery of the American economy has been slower than in any
previous
recession. More than four years after the crisis erupted, unemployment is
still much higher then when the crisis began and the growth
rate of
GDP is still far below its long-term growth path. Japan is not in a financial crisis, so the success of QE1 in
providing liquidity to banks is not very relevant. Expansive monetary policy by
Japan is likely to end its deflation and lead to price increases. That is the good
news, the bad news is that the evidence so far on QE2 and QE3 is not reassuring
and it is questionable if Abenomics’ monetary loosening will significantly raise the long term growth
rate of Japan’s real GDP, as in America such a monetary policy carries substantial risk and side effects.
When you introduce demography into the
picture the water gets incredibly
muddied.
Japan is stuck with a shrinking population, neither monetary
nor fiscal policy will adequately solve the problem. Continuing to run
fiscal deficits in a deflationary environment will only means that
government debt is pushed onward and upwards leading to a variety of
possible scenarios as to what the end game will finally be. Cutting the deficit and raising consumption tax would only
make deflation worse. The current BOJ policy while effectively driving down the yen is
producing very little in the way of visible inflation. What it is doing
is systematically distorting financial markets across the planet, Italian ten year government bond yields for
example recently hit their lowest level since November 2010
based on the idea that at the end of the day, even if the country’s debt
(currently at 127% of GDP) does continue to rise Japan style, it
doesn’t matter that much since the ECB will be there to back them up. Italy is in fact the EU country most similar to Japan in
terms of growth and demographic issues.
It was reported recently that Sumitomo
Mitsui Financial Group Inc.’s lending unit almost halved its JGB
holdings to 11.5 trillion yen in the three months through June,
this was confirmed according to the company’s earnings presentation. Mitsubishi
UFJ Financial Group Inc. also pared its holdings by 17 percent over the
quarter to 40.3 trillion yen and Mizuho Financial Group Inc. reduced the
amount by 20 percent to 24.6 trillion yen. “As we can see from
the megabanks that are drastically reducing their Japan Government Bond (JGB) holdings, there
are some company managers with a reasonable mind,” said Fujimaki.a former Soros adviser “The
risk of a default is shifting from the private sector to the public as
the BOJ splurges on JGBs. If we continue down this path the credibility
of the BOJ will be lost and the yen will plunge.”
Bottom-line, if investors in Japan's government bonds begin to believe that Abenomics
will be successful in dropping the value of the yen and in bringing back inflation
it would be logical for owners of JGBs to move out of the securities and buy foreign bonds or equities. That
would place upward pressure
on Japanese bond yields and raise the cost of government to service its massive debt. With the BOJ set to absorb half of the government bonds planned for sale this
fiscal year, domestic investors have already started venturing
overseas for higher yielding assets. Japanese were net buyers of foreign
debt for a fourth straight week, according to figures released
yesterday by the Ministry of Finance in Tokyo. If this turns in to a tsunami of money fleeing Japan it will constitute the end of the line for those holding both JGBs and the yen.
Footnote; Your comments are welcome and encouraged. If you have time
check out the archives for other post that may be of interest such as
the post below,
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/04/japans-yen-is-in-play.html