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Unloved Japan Inflation-Linked Bonds Another Blow for Abenomics
Unloved Japan Inflation-Linked Bonds Another Blow for Abenomics
Wednesday,30/03/2016|22:58GMTby
Bloomberg News
As fund managers snap up Japanese government bonds from a rapidly shrinking pool, there’s one security going unloved --...
As fund managers snap up Japanese government bonds from a rapidly shrinking pool, there’s one security going unloved -- inflation-linked debt.
The Ministry of Finance announced this week it will cut linker issuance for the first time since restarting sales in October 2013 after investors joined primary dealers in lobbying for the reduction. The debt has lost 1.5 percent this year, as nominal bonds have returned 4.6 percent in their best quarter since 1995, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes. A gauge of U.S. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities has returned 4.4 percent.
The lack of demand for linkers reflects a year of stagnation in a consumer price benchmark that the central bank is seeking to push to 2 percent. A bond market measure of inflation expectations over the next decade known as the breakeven rate stands at just 0.36 percent after slumping as low as 0.13 percent last month. That adds to signs Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s stimulus is failing, including the worst drop in factory production since the 2011 earthquake and the biggest slide in retail sales since a consumption-tax hike in 2014.
‘Admitted Defeat’
“My impression is that the government admitted defeat,” Noriatsu Tanji, a senior bond strategist at Mizuho Securities Co. in Tokyo, said of the decision to cut linker issuance. “The breakeven rate looks quite cheap, but investors aren’t willing to buy linkers out of fear they won’t be able to sell them if they want to later on.”
The Finance Ministry will offer 400 billion yen ($3.6 billion) of bonds in each of four auctions in the fiscal year beginning April, down from 500 billion yen previously. It brings the sales back to the level they were at in September 2014, when the ministry said primary dealers might welcome sales of up to 600 billion yen per auction.
The decision to reissue linkers after a five-year hiatus was a signal of Abe’s resolve to end more than a decade of deflation through his so-called three arrows strategy of monetary easing, fiscal stimulus, and economic reforms.
Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has overseen three rounds of stimulus since April 2013 that included the surprise introduction of negative interest rates this year. Over that time, the yen slumped to a 13-year low to the dollar and JGB yields fell to records across maturities as the central bank scooped up an unprecedented one-third of outstanding debt through its quantitative-easing program.
Elusive Target
Even so, Kuroda finds himself almost as far from his inflation goal as he was when he started, forcing him to extend his time frame for reaching it twice last year.
“Getting rid of the deflationary mindset is very difficult,” said Naoya Oshikubo, a rates strategist at Barclays Plc in Tokyo. “It’s undeniable that the negative interest-rate policy has had a pronounced effect in pushing down yields, but whether it will work to push up inflation remains unclear.”
Kuroda said this month that there is “a lot of room” in theory to cut the deposit rate from the current minus 0.1 percent. He also said that the decline in Japan’s interest rates is exactly what the BOJ intended, and will have a “positive impact” on asset prices.
Crude oil has rebounded to around $40 per barrel since dipping below $28 at the start of the year for the first time since 2003. Even so, Japan’s 10-year breakeven rate has lagged gauges in other developed markets, and is the lowest among 13 tracked by Bloomberg.
“Disinflation is a global phenomenon now, but Japan is still the leader,” said Masayuki Koguchi, the chief yen-bond fund manager at Mitsubishi UFJ Kokusai Asset Management in Tokyo. “Governor Kuroda’s intention isn’t getting through to the bond market.”
--With assistance from Ken McCallum To contact the reporters on this story: Kevin Buckland in Tokyo at kbuckland1@bloomberg.net, Shigeki Nozawa in Tokyo at snozawa1@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Garfield Reynolds at greynolds1@bloomberg.net, Sandy Hendry at shendry@bloomberg.net, Jonathan Annells, Ken McCallum
As fund managers snap up Japanese government bonds from a rapidly shrinking pool, there’s one security going unloved -- inflation-linked debt.
The Ministry of Finance announced this week it will cut linker issuance for the first time since restarting sales in October 2013 after investors joined primary dealers in lobbying for the reduction. The debt has lost 1.5 percent this year, as nominal bonds have returned 4.6 percent in their best quarter since 1995, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes. A gauge of U.S. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities has returned 4.4 percent.
The lack of demand for linkers reflects a year of stagnation in a consumer price benchmark that the central bank is seeking to push to 2 percent. A bond market measure of inflation expectations over the next decade known as the breakeven rate stands at just 0.36 percent after slumping as low as 0.13 percent last month. That adds to signs Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s stimulus is failing, including the worst drop in factory production since the 2011 earthquake and the biggest slide in retail sales since a consumption-tax hike in 2014.
‘Admitted Defeat’
“My impression is that the government admitted defeat,” Noriatsu Tanji, a senior bond strategist at Mizuho Securities Co. in Tokyo, said of the decision to cut linker issuance. “The breakeven rate looks quite cheap, but investors aren’t willing to buy linkers out of fear they won’t be able to sell them if they want to later on.”
The Finance Ministry will offer 400 billion yen ($3.6 billion) of bonds in each of four auctions in the fiscal year beginning April, down from 500 billion yen previously. It brings the sales back to the level they were at in September 2014, when the ministry said primary dealers might welcome sales of up to 600 billion yen per auction.
The decision to reissue linkers after a five-year hiatus was a signal of Abe’s resolve to end more than a decade of deflation through his so-called three arrows strategy of monetary easing, fiscal stimulus, and economic reforms.
Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has overseen three rounds of stimulus since April 2013 that included the surprise introduction of negative interest rates this year. Over that time, the yen slumped to a 13-year low to the dollar and JGB yields fell to records across maturities as the central bank scooped up an unprecedented one-third of outstanding debt through its quantitative-easing program.
Elusive Target
Even so, Kuroda finds himself almost as far from his inflation goal as he was when he started, forcing him to extend his time frame for reaching it twice last year.
“Getting rid of the deflationary mindset is very difficult,” said Naoya Oshikubo, a rates strategist at Barclays Plc in Tokyo. “It’s undeniable that the negative interest-rate policy has had a pronounced effect in pushing down yields, but whether it will work to push up inflation remains unclear.”
Kuroda said this month that there is “a lot of room” in theory to cut the deposit rate from the current minus 0.1 percent. He also said that the decline in Japan’s interest rates is exactly what the BOJ intended, and will have a “positive impact” on asset prices.
Crude oil has rebounded to around $40 per barrel since dipping below $28 at the start of the year for the first time since 2003. Even so, Japan’s 10-year breakeven rate has lagged gauges in other developed markets, and is the lowest among 13 tracked by Bloomberg.
“Disinflation is a global phenomenon now, but Japan is still the leader,” said Masayuki Koguchi, the chief yen-bond fund manager at Mitsubishi UFJ Kokusai Asset Management in Tokyo. “Governor Kuroda’s intention isn’t getting through to the bond market.”
--With assistance from Ken McCallum To contact the reporters on this story: Kevin Buckland in Tokyo at kbuckland1@bloomberg.net, Shigeki Nozawa in Tokyo at snozawa1@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Garfield Reynolds at greynolds1@bloomberg.net, Sandy Hendry at shendry@bloomberg.net, Jonathan Annells, Ken McCallum
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Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
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First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
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Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment