Browsing Posts published in November, 2008

No need to get excited over the fact that the Japanese economy has now contracted two consecutive quarters (no shooting the messenger). That was largely already factored into equities, thus explaining the severely depressed levels registered of late. However, as The Economist reported in its latest edition, the “Toyota shock” of a sharp decline in expected earnings (-74% fiscal y-o-y) reverberated across Japan, bringing home the realization, to some, that stocks may not be so cheap anymore. So, it may be the case that we are closer to fair value, in spite of a market that pretty much trades at book value. continue reading…

To say that the Japanese are sitting on a lot of cash is an understatement. In fact, with as much as $15T of aggregate “AUM,” they continue to struggle (esp. since the YCT was grounded) to find a way to earn better than next-to-nothing returns, given the nation’s miniaturized monetary policy. Individual investors’ long disregard for domestic equities (they’re not solely to blame) has been a big hindrance in bringing the benchmark Nikkei 225 back to a respectable level (20k remains elusive, but first things first, back to 10k). Don’t despair, however, because the Yamadas and Watanabes are back in action, rising through the wreckage — after the N225 nosedived in October to a 26-year low. continue reading…

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Mixed News for Banks
Top 3 Reasons Today’s Markets Were Down Big
Read more on Nikkei 225 Index (N225) at Wikinvest

Prior to yesterday’s 6.5% drop in Tokyo (Nikkei 225 close at 8,899), the N225 had rallied 33% in the prior six sessions to recoup a good chunk of the 37% drop between Oct. 1 and the 26-year low reached Oct. 27 at 7,162. Yesterday I stated the obvious in that Tokyo would sell-off as reality set in post-Obama euphoria, but I made the point that the number of sellers would be limited. In fact, volume and turnover weren’t exactly heavy, although stocks were broadly lower. continue reading…

The benchmark Nikkei 225 has gained 33% in the last six trading sessions since bottoming at a 26-year low at 7,162 on October 27. However, to put the surge in perspective: from the start of October to that bottom, the Nikkei shed an even more impressive 37%. So at a close yesterday of 9,521, the N225 is still nearly 2,000 points from its Oct. 1 close of 11,368, which as I’ve said many times before, is far, far from its 2007 peak levels exceeding 18,000. continue reading…

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Mixed News for Banks
The “Real” Mega-Bears
Read more on Nikkei 225 Index (N225) at Wikinvest