A few charts worth discussing
“Short-term price moves for semiconductor (SMH) and software (IVG) companies have been extreme. These violent rotations are creating opportunities for those who know the value of a business.”
“Consumer spending increased in World Cup host cities.”
Other charts worth pointing out
After-tax wage growth by household income
Semiconductors vs. hyperscalers – Free cash flow
Semiconductors vs. software – total returns ratio
Market cap of largest memory companies
Intel share price
S&P 500 Index – top 5 weight
Market cap concentration of the top 10% of large U.S. stocks
Large Language Model visits by month
Length of U.S. business cycle expansions
U.S. dollar to Japanese yen exchange rate
Japan finance minister urges giant pension fund to invest more at home
Japanese stocks surged almost 2 per cent and the yen rose from a multi-decade low after the country’s finance minister called on domestic pension funds and the public to shift more assets into domestic markets.
Traders in Tokyo described Satsuki Katayama’s comments on Friday as a form of “stealth intervention” in currency and bond markets.
Greater support from domestic investors would ease pressure on Japan’s currency and sovereign debt. The yen strengthened 0.6 per cent to ¥161.36, while yields on 10-year Japanese government bonds dropped 0.1 percentage points to 2.77 per cent.
Katayama said in a press conference that encouraging Japanese pension funds and households “to invest more in Japanese financial assets” was a policy measure that the administration wanted to pursue. She explicitly included the Government Pension Investment Fund, which manages a global portfolio of roughly $1.8tn.
Katayama herself cautioned that changing the asset allocation policy of the GPIF was not something she could do alone and that further discussions across the government would be necessary.
The prospect of a sustained repatriation of Japanese assets led by pension funds has long been seen by analysts and traders as a missing ingredient for a full revival of Japan’s capital markets.
Abbas Keshvani, Asia macro strategy director at RBC Capital Markets, said a rotation by Japanese investors from foreign to domestic assets would be “the impulse the yen needs to strengthen”.
“[The] GPIF is the largest investor. When they start to move it influences smaller asset managers to follow suit,” he said. But he cautioned: “I think this kind of verbal announcement will be very short-lived if it is not followed through with actual asset allocation changes.”
The Nikkei 225 index has climbed 73 per cent in the past 12 months and rallied a further 1.8 per cent on Friday with AI-related stocks following gains for US technology shares a day earlier, as well as getting a boost from Katayama’s comments.
Other strategists noted that the move by Katayama appeared to be a shift in approach to strengthen the yen instead of direct intervention in the foreign-exchange market.
Masahiko Loo, senior fixed-income strategist at State Street Investment Management, called it a “smart policy signal” when markets had increasingly questioned how much firepower the finance ministry had left for interventions.
This week’s fun finds
Christine from the Operations Team hosted a fantastic moai featuring authentic Filipino cuisine. Vibrant, flavourful and a great way to bring the team together at the end of the week.
Plein Air — A painting for right now, wherever you are
Plein air — French for in the open air — was the discipline of painting outdoors, in front of the weather, the way Constable studied clouds in Suffolk meadows and Monet painted the same haystacks at every hour of every season. The painters took the canvas outside because the light couldn't be remembered later, only stood inside as you painted. Plein Air stands you next to one of those paintings. The sky over your head and the sky in the painting share the same kind of hour — the same long afternoon, the same threatening storm, the same fog clinging to the river. One painting, chosen for right now. Tap the title to see why it was picked.