Home of ultra-low rates has warning for world

Bloomberg

As the world sinks into an era of ever-lower interest rates and a chasm of negative-yielding bonds, Japan’s experience offers investors an invaluable precedent.
It’s two decades since the nation pioneered zero rates and more than six years into central bank chief Haruhiko Kuroda’s record stimulus. The money managers who’ve witnessed it all provide unique insights into strategies to survive such a regime.
One legacy of Japan’s ultra-low interest-rate regime is that it has spurred massive investment into overseas assets. But even more telling is the extremes that Japanese investors have gone to in the hunt for yield.
They’ve pushed deeper into stocks and real estate, amassed bonds from Europe’s periphery to emerging markets, and loaded up on opaque securities that bundle together hundreds of loans.

Mass Exodus
As the quest for returns gets more desperate each year, popular trades become crowded, driving even the most conservative investors into riskier assets.
And there’s a greater danger of swings in currencies or monetary policies sparking sudden volatility in prices and money flows.
“These are very difficult times for financial institutions,” said Masato Mishina, the head of Nikko Asset Management Co’s institutional business division. “High risks will get you high returns but bring the danger of wiping out your capital.”
Japan Post Bank illustrates the scale of the outflows into global markets that ultra-low rates have provoked — and that asset managers in Europe and the rest of the world may need to emulate. It’s amassed a $575 billion portfolio of overseas bonds in the space of a decade and now rubs shoulders with names like Pimco, BlackRock and Vanguard.
Norinchukin Bank, a cooperative that invests the deposits of millions of Japanese farmers and fishermen, has blazed an even more dramatic trail, soaking up some $68 billion in
collateralised loan obligations from around the world.
“The era when Japanese investors, with their strong home-bias, created bond and equity portfolios full of Japan, ended 15, 20 years ago,” said Hiroyuki Matsunaga, head of investments at UBS Asset Management Japan Ltd.
He cites a renewed appetite for foreign real estate as one of the more significant developments in recent years.
The intensifying search for yield sparked a reassessment of opportunities in property, which had been shunned by many in the aftermath of the collapse of Japan’s economic bubble in the early 1990s, according to Matsunaga.
When it comes to eking out profits from bonds, the country’s life insurers know which way the wind is blowing, at home and abroad.
They piled into French government debt in recent years, but with returns there turning negative, the lifers are shifting focus from the center of the continent to the edges to gobble up the remaining pieces of positive yield.
They’re prowling from Italy to Norway and the trend is likely to continue as the European Central Bank resumes adding to its monetary easing.
The nation’s investors as a whole bought a record amount of Spanish debt in May, including corporate bonds.
They’re also looking further afield by dabbling in riskier emerging markets, setting a new high the same month for purchases in Indonesia, which issued yen-denominated bonds to take advantage of demand.
Yet the chief of Japan’s largest regional bank has a word of caution on foreign debt. While there are “solid spreads,” dollar-funding costs can turn these negative quickly, said Shizuoka Bank Ltd President Hisashi Shibata.

Get ahead of the pack
The dilemma for banks and life insurance companies is that most of their liabilities, such as customer deposits and policies, are in yen, making it necessary to protect against sharp swings in foreign exchange markets. When it comes to US Treasuries, which have been a cornerstone of many portfolios, there is little or no return to be had anymore once hedging costs are taken into account.
Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund bought a whopping 1.3 trillion yen of foreign bonds on a currency-hedged basis last fiscal year ended on March 31. It was the first time the world’s biggest pension fund had purchased overseas bonds with currency hedging already in place, suggesting GPIF sees looming risks of swings in the foreign exchange market.
Shibata is trying to forge a different path by moving aggressively into structured finance, with a view to arranging deals in Japan and eventually abroad.
He’s also led the way among regional lenders in ditching Japanese government bonds, slashing his bank’s holdings by 90 percent over the past two years. “It’s not that we wanted to do it. It’s like we’ve been told not to buy,” said Shibata, citing negative yields.
While Shizuoka is booking healthy profits, many of its peers are on shaky ground, thanks to a combination of super-low interest rates, shrinking customer bases and investments in areas beyond their expertise.
The Bank of Japan also has a wary eye on the problem. Its own gauge of financial imbalances has climbed to the highest level since the bubble era and complaints from investors and traders over its policy continue to mount.

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