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Global investors like the new-look Japan government, for now

22 Oct 2025, 1:24 AM
Global investors like the new-look Japan government, for now
Global investors like the new-look Japan government, for now

SINGAPORE/LONDON/NEW YORK, Oct 22 — Global money managers are circling back to Japan's stock and debt markets, drawn by the promises of its new reflationist government and a desire to diversify from pricier US and European markets.

Flows into yen-denominated stocks and bonds have been sustained this month, fund managers said, as investors watched Japan's coalition partners wrangle and cut deals while positioning for right-winger Sanae Takaichi to become the country's premier. Takaichi was eventually elected the country's first female prime minister yesterday.

Her promises of stimulative spending, tax breaks, low interest rates and investments have powered Japan's Nikkei to record highs and are spurring investors to think about diversifying some cash from Europe and a frothy-looking Nasdaq.

Takaichi's election along with "the psychological impact of having finally overcome the ‘lost decades’ of Japanese stocks, can certainly spur inflows," said Boston-based Peter Vassallo, FX portfolio manager at BNP Paribas Asset Management.

"It could dovetail with concerns about US valuations and policy uncertainty to encourage some investors to reallocate away from what have become highly concentrated US positions to Japan on the margin."

Financial markets have been on a tear since September as the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates, broadening a rally that had until then been concentrated in global technology and artificial intelligence giants. Wall Street's big and small indices, European and Japanese stocks, gold and bitcoin have all hit record highs recently.

Japan's allure lies in its stock market valuation. While the Nasdaq is up 19 per cent this year and trades at 34 times current earnings, the Nikkei is up 24 per cent and cheaper at a price-earnings (P/E) ratio of 22 and Europe's STOXX index is up 13 per cent for the year and at a P/E of 18.

Heading into the Japanese leadership election, foreigners bought 4.36 trillion yen (about RM124 billion) worth of Japanese stocks in the two weeks through October 11, the biggest amount of purchases in consecutive weeks since at least 2005. They had been selling for three weeks prior to that.

But money managers expect the rotation from other markets into Japan to be measured and selective.

The biggest risk to the "Takaichi trade" as it is known is that investors do not yet understand the dynamics between the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and its new coalition partner Ishin, nor are they familiar with the new finance minister, Satsuki Katayama.

While ideologically aligned, Ishin advocates a small government and Takaichi has already begun cutting back on her promises of higher spending to revive the economy and support households squeezed by inflation.

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