Tuesday, December 20, 2005
This Seems To Be Important
The Japanese finance ministry seems set to unveil plans to cut new government bond issuance by more than 10 per cent - to below Y30,000bn ($258bn) - in the year to April 2007. The Financial Times has the story. They had better hope they are reading the situation aright, since if they aren't they are heading straight back into recession. This is what all the battle with the BOJ is about. 2007 is
Right Royal Row Over the BOJ
Things down at the Bank of Japan are hardly calm these days. On one version of events (see yesterdays Tankan) Japan is about - finally - to emerge from deflation, and the BoJ naturally enough wants to 'normalise' monetary policy. The politicians however are non-too clear about this:"Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic party will on Thursday urge the Bank of Japan to tie its monetary policy to
Friday, December 9, 2005
Japanese Third Quarter Growth
Well here it is, all coming home to daddy. The Japanese data I mean. Third quarter annual growth in Japan has just been revised down from 1.7 to 1%. This is coming home to daddy, since I continue to believe that - for demographic reasons - we will not see a self-sustaining Japanese recovery. Japan will continue to be dependent for growth on China, the US and Europe. Hence weaker than expected
Monday, December 5, 2005
Japan and the US Yield Curve
Understand why the US yield curve may be about to invert and you've understood a lot IMHO.Brad Setser picks up on the FTs Steve Johnson, and earlier here. Johnson makes one extremely revealing point:"The chief problem for the yen is that the flattening of the US yield curve has made it uneconomical for Japanese investors to hedge their ongoing purchases of US Treasuries, but a falling yen
Monday, November 28, 2005
Foreign Investors Buy Into the Japanese Recovery
Foreign investors buy into the Japanese recovery, but the Japanese themselves apparently don't, or at least if they do its's on nothing like the same scale. More to add to the puzzle I was getting at in my last post about how people seem to find all this so hard to understand or accept. Denial, what denial!Foreign buying of Japanese stocks has reached a record level as global investors buy into
Here We Go Again!
Well yet another consumption driven recovery seems to be grinding to a halt in Japan. The only thing which puzzles me is why people continue to be surprised, and why people fail to see the similarieties between Japan and Germany in this regard. It's an up-hill (rather than a flat) world obviously:Japan’s “Warm Biz” campaign, which should have boosted the sale of warm winter clothes, has failed to
Sunday, November 20, 2005
Good News, Now Let Battle Commence!
Most commentators are getting excited about the recent reading on the Japanese core consumer prices index which stopped falling in October. There is just one small snag, the core CPI in Japan - until next August - still includes oil and energy costs. Stripped of these it is estimated that the underlying CPI was still down by about 0.3 per cent. The reading does however mark the first 'near miss'
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