Central Bank News Link List – 20 April 2012

By Central Bank News
Here's today's Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous central bank news link list.  Remember, if you want to submit links for inclusion in the daily link list, just email them through to us or post them in the comments section below.

Small Caps – A Way to Bet on Developing Markets…Without Investing Overseas

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The lucky investors who bought shares on the Cambodian stock exchange’s first trading day racked up a tasty 47% gain.

This follows the opening of a stock exchange in Laos last year. And news that Myanmar (Burma, to old timers like your editor) also plans to open an exchange.

These markets are what investors call, “developing markets.”


They’re typically high-risk. And in countries that have a limited capital and financial market.

Despite that, big investment firms (especially hedge funds) like these markets. Why? Because they can place big bets on stocks where they could make a big return.

Such as a 47% gain in one day.

The kind of return they can’t get from backing boring old blue-chip stocks on the New York, London or Australian stock exchanges.

But for private investors, it’s not so easy to punt on these developing markets. But don’t worry. You won’t miss out.

Because there’s another way to punt on developing markets. And it’s right here on the Australian Stock Exchange. It involves investing in stocks the big hedge funds would love to invest in, but can’t…

Small Cap Stocks – The Aussie “Developing Market”

When you read about big investors making big bucks from betting on Cambodian, Vietnamese, Indian or Chinese stocks, there’s a chance you feel some jealousy.

After all, surely it’s not fair that the big boys make all this cash, while it’s too hard – and expensive – for you to play the same game.

Well, let’s set your mind at rest… so you can tone down the jealousy.

The big funds don’t necessarily invest in those exotic locations because they want to. They invest because it’s the only way they can boost their returns.

You see, most hedge funds would rather invest in their own back yard: Aussies in Australia, Americans in America and Germans in Germany.

Trouble is, the bigger a hedge fund becomes, the harder it is to invest in speculative stocks without it affecting the stock’s share price.

And thanks to exchange rules, once you own more than 5% of a company, the company has to disclose this info to the market. That’s a nightmare for investment firms. Because disclosing holdings to the market means disclosing info to their competition.

And as soon as the competition knows what they’re up to, the advantage is gone.

So for many big firms, investing in Australia’s “developing markets” is just too hard. So they pack their bags and head off to search for investments overseas… where the disclosure rules may not be so strict.

It’s why American investing big shot, John Paulson used billions of his clients’ dollars to buy shares in obscure Chinese timber firm, Sino-Forest.

Not because he necessarily wanted to, but because to get the kind of returns he was after from a stock, he just couldn’t invest his clients’ money in the U.S. market.

Unfortunately, Paulsen’s Chinese bet went bad. And his clients lost a lot of money.

That can happen when you don’t understand the market you’re investing in. That’s why we prefer to bet on Aussie “developing markets”… otherwise known as small-cap stocks

Gains You Won’t Get from Blue-Chip Stocks

The fact is, as a private investor you don’t need to take unnecessary risks. You don’t need to research thousands of foreign stocks… worry about foreign exchange rates… or political instability… OK, maybe the last one, that’s hard to avoid wherever you invest.

The best thing is, you get to invest in stocks that could make you a 47% return in a day. And those stocks are available right here on the ASX.

If you don’t believe us, look at the following list. These stocks had the biggest percentage gains on the ASX yesterday:

Acuvax Ltd [ASX: ACU] +100%

Metal Storm Ltd [ASX: MST] +100%

Q Ltd [ASX: QXQ] +75%

Somerton Energy Ltd [ASX: SNE] +42.9%

Quest Petroleum NL [ASX: QPN] +37.5%

Malachite Resources Ltd [ASX: MAR] +35.7%

Funtastic Ltd [ASX: FUN] +29.4%

Actinogen Ltd [ASX: ACW] +26.1%

Isonea Ltd [ASX: ISN] +25%

Nex Metals Exploration Ltd [ASX: NME] +25%

There isn’t a single blue-chip stock among that list. And not one of these stocks has a market capitalisation over $81 million.

It goes to show you that the best opportunity for big returns is in the smaller end of the market. That’s where the big money-multipliers are.

Of course, most of the stocks we’ve listed are too small or risky even for us to tip in Australian Small-Cap Investigator. But there are plenty of other small-cap stocks that are suitable investments.

In short, big stock market gains aren’t something just for obscure stocks in under-developed countries. It’s also for private Aussie investors who are looking for a stock market boost.

It may sound exciting to invest in a so-called developing market, but the reality is, for private Aussie investors, there are enough great opportunities on the ASX without having to send your money overseas.

For more proof, don’t forget to check out this latest presentation. It gives you the lowdown on how we pick stocks, including our top five small-cap stocks on the ASX today.

Cheers.
Kris

The Conference of the Year “After America” DVD

Why You MUST Speculate

Disruptive Technology Stocks For Smart Small-Cap Investors


Small Caps – A Way to Bet on Developing Markets…Without Investing Overseas

It’s a New World Led by Emerging Markets

By MoneyMorning.com.au

I’ve been waiting for this day for a while. Chris Mayer’s World Right Side Up is finally out and ready for purchase, and Laissez Faire Books is honoured to be the leading distributor.

I’ve followed Chris’s work for many years, and come to admire his capacity for seeing around corners with unusual prescience. He was warning of a housing bust, and explained precisely how it would play itself out, fully two years before the reality dawned on everyone else.

Here is why I think his new book is important.


In the last decade, something astonishing has happened that has escaped the attention of nearly every American citizen. In the past, and with good reason, we were inclined to imagine that if we were living here, we were living everywhere. We were used to being ahead. The trends of the world would follow us, so there wasn’t really much point in paying that close attention. This national myopia has long been an affliction, but one without much cost. Until very recently.

One symptom of the change is that it used to be that the dollars in your local savings account or stock fund paid you money. The smart person saved and got rewarded. It seemed like the American thing to do. It is slowly dawning on people that this isn’t working anymore. Saving alone no longer pays, thanks largely to a Federal Reserve policy of zero-percent interest.

But that’s not the only reason. There’s something more fundamental going on, something that Mayer, author of the absolutely essential and eye-opening book World Right Side Up, believes is going to continue for the rest of our lifetimes and beyond. The implications of his thesis are profound for investors. It actually affects the lives of everyone in the digital age.

The Growth of Emerging Markets

Mayer points out that sometime in the last 10 years, the world economy doubled in size at the same time the balance of the world’s emerging wealth shifted away from the United States and toward all various parts of the world. The gap between us and them began to narrow. The world’s emerging markets began to make up half the global economy.

When you look at a graph of the US’s slice of global productivity, it is a sizable slice, taking up 21 percent, but it is nothing particularly amazing. Meanwhile, emerging markets make up 10 of the 20 largest economies in the world. India is gigantic, larger than Germany. Russia, which was a basket case in my living memory, has passed the UK. Turkey (who even talks about this country?) is larger than Australia. China might already be bigger than the United States.

Check these growth rates I pulled from the latest data, and compare to the US’s pathetic numbers: Malaysia and Malawi: 7.1%; Nicaragua: 7.6%; Dominican Republic 7.8%; Sri Lanka: 8.0%; Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Brazil, and Peru: 8.5%; India: 8.8%; Turkey and Turkmenistan: 9%; China: 10%; Singapore and Paraguay: 14.9%.

Emerging Market Economies Look Better Managed

Then there’s the measure of the credit-default swap rating, which is a kind of insurance against default. The French rate is higher than Brazilian, Peruvian and Colombian debt. In the last 10 years, the stock markets of those Latin American countries far outperformed European stock markets. Also, many emerging economies are just better managed than the heavily bureaucratized, debt-laden economic landscape of the US and Europe. As for consumption, emerging markets have already surpassed the United States.

“These trends,” writes Mayer, “will become more pronounced over time. The creation of new markets, the influx of hundreds of millions of people who will want cell phones and air conditioners and water filters, who will want to eat a more varied diet of meats and fruits and vegetables, among many other things, will have a tremendous impact on world markets.”

World Right Side Up

Why does he see the trends as creating a “world right side up”? Because, he argues, this represents a kind of normalization of the globe in a post-US empire world. The Cold War was a grave distortion. In fact, the whole of the 20th century was a distortion too. Going back further, back to 1,000 years ago, we find a China that was far advanced over Western Europe.

I read Mayer’s prognostications with an attentive ear, for several reasons. His book is not the result of thousands of hours of Internet surfing or cribbing from the CIA World Factbook. He is an on-the-ground reporter who will go anywhere and do anything for a story about emerging wealth. The result is the kind of credibility that can’t be gained any other way.

But there is another reason. Mayer is often cited as one of a handful of people who saw what was happening in the housing market in the mid-2000s and issued several lengthy and detailed warnings. Not only did he foresee the bust, but he explained why the boom was taking place. He saw a perfect storm brewing with a combination of subsidized loans, too-big-to-fail mortgage agencies and a Federal Reserve policy that was designed to distort capital flows. He called it like few others.

This is not because he is a magic man. It is because he is schooled in solid economic theory – this becomes obvious in page after page – and also because he is intensely curious to discover the workings of that theory in the real world. In his way of thinking, if we can’t understand or expect change, we can’t understand markets, much less anticipate their direction.

Another thing: Mayer is less interested in big aggregates like GDP (and other such “economic monstrosities”) and more interested in taking a “boots-on-the ground view, a firsthand look.” His aim: “stay close to what is happening and what we can understand in more tangible ways.” And he seems close to everything: cement factories, the hotel industry, ranches and farms, coal and cell phone companies, financial houses, glassmakers, water purification companies – all the stuff that makes up life itself.

And what he discovers again and again are localized institutions that are cooperating globally (trade!) to build capital, wealth and new sources of progress that no one planned and hardly anyone anticipated. Here is the story of the building of civilization as it has always happened in history, but tracked carefully and precisely in our times.

In this book, he uses this combination of smarts plus fanatical curiosity to examine all the main contenders for the future: Colombia, Brazil, Nicaragua, China, India, the UAE, Syria, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Mongolia, Argentina, Russia, Turkey, central Asia, Mexico and Canada. Here he finds innovation, capital, entrepreneurship, creativity, a willingness to try ideas and a passion for improving the lot of mankind.

His reporting defies conventional wisdom at every turn. Page after page, the reader will find himself thinking, That’s amazing. Nicaragua is not socialist. Medellín, Colombia (the “city of eternal spring”), is not violent. Brazil is no longer a land of rich and poor, but rather home to the world’s largest middle class. China is the world’s largest market for cars and cellphones; even in the rural areas you can buy Coke and a Snickers bar. India is the world’s leader in minting new millionaires. Cambodia (Cambodia!) ranks among the world’s most powerful magnets for investment capital. Mongolia has one of the world’s best-performing stock markets.

US Companies Move into Emerging Markets

He also discovers many large American companies that have seen the writing on the wall and opened up factories, manufacturing plants, financial services and retail shops all over emerging markets. These companies are attracted by the intelligence of the workers, the relatively unregulated and low-tax legal environment and the cultures that have a new love for enterprise. And the returns are there too. The bottom line is sending a signal for them to expand.

It’s particularly intriguing to read about how all these emerging – market entrepreneurs overcome terrible and destructive bureaucracies – they exist everywhere! – that try to gum up the works, as well as bureaucrats who know nothing of business yet have the power to kill it off. Yet their very inefficiency is the saving grace. They can’t control the future. The brilliance of the market somehow finds the workaround.

Investment Opportunities in Emerging Markets

Mayer’s main interest is in finding investment opportunities, and he lays them out in great detail here. If you think about it, this is just about the best vantage point from which to examine a new and unfamiliar world. Commerce is the driving force of history, the road map of where we’ve been and where we are going. To track down the profitable trade is likely to provide more valuable insight than all the academic speculations.

This is a very exciting book. It weaves history, geography, economics and firsthand reporting into a marvelous tapestry, one that is as beautiful as art and as complex and varied as the world itself has become in our times. A fine stylist, Mayer offers some fantastic one-liners in every section (“Change is like a pin to the balloons of conventional wisdom”) and his detailed stories give you the sense that you are traveling alongside him, like walking with Virgil in Purgatorio and Paradiso in one trip.

Mayer quotes Marco Polo: “I have not told half of what I saw.” In the same way, I’ve not told even 5 percent of what’s in this extraordinary tour of the world most people don’t know has come to exist only in the new millennium. There is no way a short review can do this book justice. There is so much wisdom packed in its pages. It is a meaty and enormously credible look at a world most people have never seen. In ten or twenty years, people will point to this book and say: this guy chronicled and understood what few others did.

Regards,

Jeffrey Tucker
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

From the Archives…

The Deep Ocean Frontier For Mining Profits
2012-04-013 – Dr. Alex Cowie

The Turkish Economy: Knocking At The Door
2012-04-12 – Karim Rahemtulla

Inflation and Sovereign Debt – Why The Best Is Yet To Come
2012-04-11 – Nick Hubble

How to Make the Most Out of Small Cap Investing
2012-04-10 – Kris Sayce

Why You MUST Speculate
2012-04-09 – Kris Sayce


It’s a New World Led by Emerging Markets

USDJPY is facing channel resistance

USDJPY is facing the resistance of the upper border of the price channel on 4-hour chart. As long as the channel resistance holds, the rise from 80.31 could be treated as consolidation of the downtrend from 84.17, and another fall is still possible after consolidation. However, a clear break above the channel resistance will indicate that the fall from 84.17 had completed at 80.31 already, then the following upward movement could bring price to 83.00 zone.

usdjpy

Forex Signals

How to Handle an Economic Implosion

By Elliott Wave International

I came across some research on the subject of worry. Here’s how it was presented:

Things People Worry About:

  • things that never happen – 40%
  • things which did happen that worrying can’t undo – 30%
  • needless health worries – 12%
  • petty, miscellaneous worries – 10%
  • real, legitimate worries – 8%

Of the legitimate worries, half are problems beyond our personal ability to solve. That leaves 4% in the realm of worries people can do something about.

I thought about our gigantic national debt and weak economy. These seem to fit into both subcategories of “real” worries. You can’t do much as an individual to solve the nation’s debt and economic problems, yet you can prepare for a worsening economic downtrend.

Do we see evidence for an economic turn for the worse?

Well, consider that the evidence is so overwhelming that it took 456 pages of the second edition of Robert Prechter’s book, Conquer the Crash, to cover it. And since that book published, Prechter has consistently devoted his monthly Elliott Wave Theorist to the facts and evidence behind his forecast.

Here’s a chart from the book that was updated by Elliott Wave International in March 2012:

The downturn from 2008 is critically important, as it shows that after an almost unbroken 60-year climb, the contraction is underway. It surely has much further to go, because it is still a third higher than it was at the outset of the last debt deflation in 1929.

The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, March 2012

The rating agencies are well aware of what the above chart means. You probably know that Standard & Poor’s downgraded U.S. debt from the nation’s long-standing triple-A to AA+. Now, another rating agency has taken their rating even lower:

Rating firm Egan-Jones cuts its credit rating on the U.S. government to “AA” from “AA+” with a negative watch, citing a lack of progress in cutting the mounting federal debt.

CNBC.com, April 5

Robert Prechter’s bestseller, Conquer the Crash, provides practical information about what you can do to protect your finances in the coming economic implosion. And right now, Elliott Wave International is offering 8 lessons from Conquer the Crash in a free 42-page report that covers:

  • What to do with your pension plan
  • How to identify a safe haven
  • What you should do if you run a business
  • A Short List of Imperative “Dos” and Don’ts”
  • And more

In every disaster, only a very few people prepare themselves beforehand. Discover the ways you can be financially prepared and safe.

Get Your FREE 8-Lesson “Conquer the Crash Collection” Now >>

This article was syndicated by Elliott Wave International and was originally published under the headline How to Handle an Economic Implosion. EWI is the world’s largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts led by Chartered Market Technician Robert Prechter provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.

 

Sterling Boosted As Nation’s Economy Could Be Improving

Source: ForexYard

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The British Pound made solid gains over the Euro on Thursday’s trading day after rumours that the Bank of England will bring next months stimulus program to a halt,as there are indications that the nation’s economy is improving.

The sterling dropped versus the U.S dollar after reaching a 5-month high, as minutes from the recent Bank of England meeting suggested that inflation may be closer then expected.

The Pound reached its strongest level against the 17-nation Euro  since August 2010 after appreciating 0.1 percent to 81.82 around 16:00 London time. Against the greenback, despite losing some ground on its recent 5-month high, the Sterling rose 0.2 percent after hitting $1,6079, the highest point since Mid-November.

According to Bloomberg Correlation Weighted Indexes, the sterling has shown the second biggest gains in the past month,coming behind to only the Japanese Yen.Figures show that the pound appreciated 1.6 in the past month whilst the Yen showed a climb of 2.9 percent. The Greenback also had positive figures for the month ,after rising 0.4 percent.

There are a number of financial reports due for release on Friday that could have an impact on the currency markets, in particular, the Euro and the British Pound. The reports include German Ifo Business Climate Index,GBP Retail Sales as well as Canadian Core CPI.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

US Jobless Claims Affects The Canadian Dollar

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox (Dublin) – The Bank of Canada meeting had resolved to keep the monetary policy as it projected an exit following positive global economy. However, this week’s jobless claims from the US have indicated that the bad performance indicated last week is reflective of a trend in the economy but not a onetime event. Following the release of the US jobless claims data, the loonie fluctuated against the US dollar increasing by 0.7 percent and later declining. Canadian dollar had increased as the BOC Governor indicated that the exiting from the stimulus program was appropriate.

The jobless claims which came at 386,000 against an expectation of 367,000 forced the Canadian dollar to pare its gains losing 0.2 percent against the dollar to exchange at 99.35 cents per US dollar. The loonie had advanced against the US dollar the strongest on April 17 when it rose to 98.65 cents. 

Analysts are now concerned that the current increase in the jobless claims for two weeks in a row indicates a possible trend for the US economy. The dollar fell against the yen after the report but continued to rise against the euro as appetite for riskier assets diminished in the market. For a long time, the jobless claims had been around 367,000 hence shifting to 386,000 this week and 387,000 last week might be indicative of a new trend.

Non-Farm Payrolls report was the first one to signal a change followed by the two jobless claims reports. However, the unemployment rate remained at 8.2 percent but this might change if the current trend continues.

According to Avery Shenfeld, a Chief Economist at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce in Toronto, the weaker jobless claims may have caused the loonie’s drop from the previous gains. He added that signs of weakness in US economy have dampened expectations of BOC increasing the interest rate.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
Tradervox.com is a Forex News Portal that provides real-time news and analysis relating to the Currency Markets.
News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
Follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/tradervox

Shirakawa Reiterates His Commitment to Monetary Easing Program

By TraderVox.com

​Tradervox (Dublin) – Some concerned about the Bank of Japan’s stand on monetary easing policy had been raised earlier this week after some analysts pointed out that the BOJ is confusing traders on its stance. Today, Masaaki Shirakawa, the BOJ Governor set the record straight by reaffirming his commitment to the monetary easing policy.

He said in a speech in New York that he remains committed to continuing monetary easing. He also indicated that the Japanese economy had stagnated despite reports released today showing that the exports grew the fastest in a year.

In his speech, Shirakawa said that the BOJ will pursue powerful monetary easing through different measures that will include retaining interest rate at practically zero and buying financial assets until its YoY CPI inflation of 1 percent is presumed achievable. The Japanese currency had strengthened against the US dollar to post World War II record prompted the BOJ to embark on an asset purchases program to save exporters from tremendous losses they were getting.

In another report, Japan had experienced a smaller than expected trade deficit which has boosted sentiments that Japanese economy is on a recovery path. Further, the outbound shipments rose by 5.9 percent in March from a year earlier which has exceeded the market’s estimate of a 0.2 percent increase.

The statement by the BOJ Governor came after a former BOJ member indicated that the recent actions by the BOJ has been against its stance of monetary easing saying that the Bank of Japan was confusing traders. Following comments by the BOJ governor Mizuho Securities Co., SMBC Nikko Securities Inc., and Morgan Stanley MUFG Securities Co. have predicted that BOJ will expand asset purchases at its April 27 meeting. The central bank is under pressure from lawmakers to be more aggressive in countering the decade-long deflation.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
Tradervox.com is a Forex News Portal that provides real-time news and analysis relating to the Currency Markets.
News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
Follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/tradervox

Gold Makes Gains After Reaching Week-Low

Source: ForexYard

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Gold showed some strength during Thursday’s trading after falling to a week-low prior to today.
Even though the precious metal was trading well below the levels we have previously seen, investors were keen to profit from the current poor price.

The yellow metal appreciated after apparent rumours that France could be downgraded,which lead to panic in the European Markets creating renewed concern over the Euro-zone crisis.The rumours of a French downgrade was spread throughout Europe despite the fact that strategists dismiss the claims.With the first round of Presidential elections to take place soon, it seems unlikely that a downgrade would occur.

Gold prices were also given a boost by the U.S weekly jobless claims which produced better then expected results.The precious metal climbed as high as $1,654.90 after appreciating 0.5 percent to $1,647 during Thursday’s trading.

A boost in the number of unemployment benefit requests in the U.S also helped in gold trading up, as the figures reached a four-month high,leading to investors showing concern for the future of the U.S Economy.

Despite gold’s recent boost,the yellow metal has not performed as a safe-haven asset should over the past few months. There were mixed fortunes for other metals during Thursday’s trading as Copper slightly fell whilst silver showed very modest gains.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

DXJ: The Smart Way to Invest in Japan?

Article by Investment U

DXJ: The Smart Way to Invest in Japan?

The smart way to invest in Japan is to take the yen/dollar out of the equation. And the WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity ETF (NYSE: DXJ) does just that.

About a decade after Japan’s bubble burst, I was having a cool San Miguel beer with a leading money manager at the Hong Kong Jockey Club.

We were discussing the rise of China and whether Japan could snap out of its slump, when my friend made a comment that stuck with me over the years.

“Carl, there’s only room for one big dog in Asia.”

It certainly seems so.

After dominating Asia for a long time, China fell apart after turning inward in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century. Meanwhile, Japan was turning from isolation to looking outward and re-igniting its economy. This imbalance in strength led to the tragic Sino-Japanese war.

After World War II, Japan immediately began its amazing export-led industrial recovery while China again faced turmoil, turned inward and cut itself from the world under Mao’s misguided leadership.

The Tables Have Turned

Since at least 1990, China surged at double-digit growth rates while the Japanese economy sputtered along.

For Asia’s investment managers, beating their performance benchmark during this time was a piece of cake – just underweight Japan.

But lately, it appears money is flowing from China to Japan. It’s too early to call this a trend, but if you’re a momentum player you’ll want to follow what the big boys are doing.

In the latest survey of global money managers by Bank of America Merrill Lynch, the percentage who said they were underweight Japan shrank sharply – to just 4% in March from 23% in February.

This led to the Japanese market having its best quarter since 1988. And last month, the Nikkei, which rallied 23% since late November, closed above 10,000 for the first time since last summer.

Bears Make Headlines, Bulls Make Money

The bear case for Japan is well known: high debt, slow growth, aging population, gaping budget deficits and dysfunctional politics. To many investors, it seems like yesterday’s story, while emerging markets look like the future.

But there are two sides to every story, and the case for keeping some Japan exposure in your portfolio is clear and compelling…

Almost exactly one year ago I wrote 13 reasons why Japan still had a bright future ahead.

Well here’s a look back at some of those reasons why ignoring Japan may be a mistake, plus a few new ones:

  1. Sean Darby, Jefferies Chief Global Equity Strategist, expects companies in the Nikkei Index to have earnings growth of 60% in 2012.
  2. Roughly 95% of Japan’s $10-trillion sovereign debt is currently held by Japanese investors. This means debt funding isn’t dependent on the whims of foreign lenders.
  3. The country has current gold and foreign exchange reserves of over $1 trillion.
  4. Japanese companies and banks are flush with cash. Deposits at banks exceed outstanding loans by $1.8 trillion.
  5. Japan is probably the only developed economy in the world to pull off trade surpluses with China, Taiwan and South Korea. Trade between Japan and Asia has doubled over the last decade.
  6. Japan’s creative spirits are alive and kicking. The country still is awarded U.S. patents at a rate double that of the Koreans and Taiwanese together.
  7. The strong yen is giving Japanese companies the upper hand in grabbing overseas companies at cheap prices.
  8. Share prices in Japan are just above book value compared with double book value in the United States.
  9. Peter Tasker of Arcus Research finds that 25% of Japan’s companies trade at less than 10 times earnings compared to just 4% for the S&P 500 Index.
  10. On a price to sales basis, Japan trades two times cheaper than a basket of the BRIC markets (Brazil, Russia, India and China).
  11. Japan’s market beats to its own drummer, so having some Japan in your global portfolio is a great diversifier. Over the last 10 years, Japan moved in sync with the S&P 500 only 30% of the time.
  12. Japan’s government is injecting liquidity into the economy to spur the economy and is proposing a cut in corporate tax rates.
  13. Finally, keep in mind that Japan is still the world’s third-largest economy – just a hair behind China. A big economy like Japan’s won’t post headline-grabbing double-digit economic growth, but can still deliver sizable profits and cash flow.

How to Play Japan

This is all impressive stuff, but how should you invest in Japan’s potential renaissance?

If you chose the popular iShares MSCI Japan Index Fund (NYSE: EWJ) exchange-traded fund, you’re not very happy, even though it gained approximately 8% so far in 2012.

The key reason for EWJ’s surge through the first 10 weeks of this year was a 7% decline in the value of the yen versus the dollar. This is rocket fuel to this EWJ’s export heavy holdings.

This is also double-edged sword, since a weaker yen also cuts into your dollar-based returns.

The solution? Take the yen/dollar out of the equation.

The WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity ETF (NYSE: DXJ) does just that, which is why it gained nearly 16% this year. Figuring out an investment opportunity is important, but so is picking the best investment tool to capture it.

China’s cascading troubles may reflect a buy point close to Templeton’s principle of “maximum pessimism.” It could also signal that China’s role as Asia’s big dog is waning.

Good Investing,

Carl Delfeld

Article by Investment U