
Happy New Year everybody! I hope you all enjoyed a peaceful winter holiday and are back, raring to go and make big things happen.
For some reason, I had a feeling that this was going to be a challenging year and it didn’t really get off to the best start in Japan. For those interested, I was googling around yesterday trying to figure out the best way to donate to disaster relief on the Noto Peninsula. I found this page run by Ishikawa Prefecture. You can download a form here to request a receipt for your donation for tax purposes. Donations qualify for the donation deduction and there is a useful FAQ on the tax treatment of donations here.
So yeah, earthquakes, runway collisions, fires and we’re only a third of the way through January!
From a personal finance and investing perspective, there is some exciting stuff going on though. The New NISA has launched. I logged into my SBI account and it was pretty simple to get started. I have already set up the ‘tsumitate’ allocation and started buying some stocks for the ‘growth’ allocation. Clearly, everyone else is doing the same thing as the Nikkei is pumping so far this year!
I posted a couple of interesting takes on Japan on ‘X’ yesterday: an optimistic look at the year ahead from Jesper Koll and a much darker look at the demographic issues facing Japan from author Nire Shūhei. It always pays to look at both sides.
So how to invest in the year ahead? If you have been reading this blog over time, you will know that I divide investments up into core and satellite allocations. The core is a diversified portfolio weighted heavily to your base currency that just gets rebalanced once a year. This would typically account for around 70-80% of your investments and the idea is to keep adding to it as much as you can. If it’s a bit dull and boring, you are probably doing it right!
The other 20-30% can be allocated to satellite holdings, which may be a little more racy and exhibit a higher risk-return profile. If this part isn’t fun, then you are probably doing it wrong!
Satellite holdings will change over time depending on the economic environment we are in. So how are things looking?
Some thoughts
On the one hand, things look pretty much like they did for most of last year. The Fed funds rate is 5.5%. People who are obviously long risk assets have been trumpeting the start of rate cuts as early as March, but Mr Powell doesn’t look like he’s in much of a hurry to me. Although the Bank of Japan has adjusted its yield curve control policy and allowed long-term interest rates to rise a little, it is still continuing with its negative interest rate policy. There has been a significant amount of speculation, from both within and outside Japan, about when the BOJ will ‘normalise’ rates – I do love this term, like there is a way to return to normal with government debt to GDP at 264%! Gulp…
Despite noises being made about an exit from negative rate policy, it’s notable how quickly these ideas get put on the shelf. Comments I have heard recently include: ‘The earthquake will make it harder to normalise rates’. Probably true, but any excuse to avoid the inevitable. The Labour Ministry’s November report showed that real wages have declined for the past 20 months in a row, so there’s no sign of the mystical ‘virtuous cycle’ of wages outpacing price rises that would signal a move from the central bank.
It’s not going to happen, is it?
So if you’re waiting for the yen to get back to something sensible against the US dollar, good luck! Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent enough to go on a nice holiday abroad…
Japanese stocks, for the most part, are loving the weak yen. Any company with significant exports and profits abroad will see those profits magnified when converted back to yen. If you’re wondering why your Toyota shares are doing so well, there you are.
What kind of market is this?
Some time ago, I read the book Reminisces of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre. It’s considered somewhat of a bible by many investors. While there are some interesting tales of hi-jinks and high leverage, there was only really one key thing I got out of the book, but that one thing has stuck with me: Traders and investors should always know if we are in a bull market or a bear market.
It’s always the simple things that have the most impact, right? The protagonist in the book is a stock trader and his big-picture strategy is very simple: If he is in a bull market, he trades with a long bias. If he is in a bear market, he trades with a short bias. If you don’t know what kind of market you are in, you have no business trading, he says. The author coined the phrase ‘bulls and bears make money; pigs get slaughtered’.
Now, if you are a long-term investor, you don’t have to be concerned with trying to short-sell. You are more than likely to get into trouble. Simply replace the terms ‘long’ and ‘short’ with ‘risk-on’ and ‘risk-off’. Again, I am talking about satellite holdings here. You don’t have to overthink the core part of your portfolio.
Bull or bear?
The Nikkei 225 index gained around 28% last year. After such a positive start to the year, it is widely expected to keep on trucking. It’s pretty clear we are currently in a bull market. If you live in Japan and have a need for JPY base currency, then Japanese stocks are a good place to be.
The only question is what could go wrong? What could bring an end to the bull market?
I think the main short-term danger is a recession in the US. Although the financial press continues to focus on the ‘soft landing’ narrative, history tells us that rate-tightening cycles rarely have a happy ending. Depending on the depth of the recession, US stocks could fall anywhere between 20-50%. I don’t see how Japan just keeps sailing on if that happens, no matter how much better value stocks here may be. If you have already loaded up your investments for the year, I don’t think that’s a bad thing but be prepared to navigate some choppy seas. So it may not be a reason to go risk-off, but be prepared for some volatility.
The BOJ is another matter. If they actually did try to raise rates we would probably experience more than a minor squall. My expectation is they daren’t even try but let’s keep an eye on them. At year-end, I was watching a news feature where they interviewed Japanese business leaders and asked them their views on the stock market for 2024. When asked what they thought was the biggest danger to the Nikkei bull market, the majority of them said ‘the election of Donald Trump’. Interesting…my feeling is these guys need to look a little closer to home.

I’m not even going to get into geopolitics. Lots of risk there, but what are you gonna do?
Outside of Japan, US markets are making all-time highs. However, when you look under the hood, the good cheer is really driven by one group of stocks, known as the Magnificent Seven. If this is a new term to you, the stocks are Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla. The size of this group is truly staggering – last time I looked, the combined market cap was around $11.7 trillion. That’s about equivalent to the entire stock markets of Japan, the UK and Canada combined! This group returned around 107% in 2023.
So this bull market is clearly a Magnificent Seven bull market, and the narrative driving it is AI. If you own any kind of global stock fund, go and check their top ten holdings. I’ll bet you that these seven stocks feature prominently.
This group of stocks are a must-own. If you feel you don’t own enough of them, a US recession and corresponding sell-off in the stock market could present a nice opportunity.
Emerging markets could be worth a whole new post, but here’s the tldr: everyone is buying India, not China.
US government bonds got clobbered through this rate hike cycle. If you bought them after the clobbering, you will probably do well as rates eventually subside.
I’m from the UK, so I usually keep an eye on the market over there, but wow, that does not look to me like a place I would want to allocate capital unless I was actually moving back there. Everything about it screams bear…
The biggest bull of all
Of course, the heavyweight champion of satellite holdings is my personal favourite. Yes, the Bitcoin-led crypto bull market is upon us. I already wrote the post on that, it’s right here. You know what to do.
Or do you? I saw a great tweet by Tuur Demeester earlier, in which he said that many people will adopt crypto reluctantly. ‘Hate buying’ he calls it. He also points out how the SEC just ‘hate approved’ the spot Bitcoin ETFs. So why are people going to buy something they hate in the end?
The answer, perhaps, lies in the ongoing debasement of Fiat money, which has accelerated considerably since the 2008 financial crisis. Raoul Pal talks about this a lot and has some great charts. You think your stocks are going up, but really it’s just the purchasing power of your money going down, and you are barely breaking even. People are gradually waking up to this. And there are not many assets that are likely to outperform this money debasement over time. Gold is not getting there. Tech stocks will probably do it, and crypto will likely do it too. Maybe you’re not ready yet, but one day you will be, and you might hate it, but you will probably buy it in the end. Better to rip off the band-aid now perhaps?
On that note, I wish you a happy and prosperous 2024!
Disclaimer: This should go without saying, but the information contained in this blog is not investment advice, or an incentive to invest, and should not be considered as such. This is for information only.
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