It may be time to invest in Japanese Stocks

Japan

Japan's NIKKEI reached its nominal all-time high of 38,957 in December 1989; today its in the 9,000 range and according to Tim Price trading close to book value at levels, in real terms, equating to where it traded in the early 1970s.

Time to consider iShares MSCI Japan Index (ETF) (NYSE:EWJ).

Has there been a more demoralizing and disappointing major stock market, over the course of the past 20 years, than Japan's? It reached its nominal all-time high of 38,957 in December 1989; it closed today at 8,693, just 800 points or so north of its 2003 low.

The plight of Japanese shareholders is germane to anybody thinking of buying stocks today. Japan's companies are well-run, and its financial institutions, as we saw with the MUFG deal, are today more part of the solution than they are part of the problem. And yet, as Tim Price notes,

the entire Japanese stock market is left trading close to book value at levels, in real terms, equating to where it traded in the early 1970s.

 

Japan, of course, knows what it's like to go through a credit crisis and a vicious deleveraging -- and it's had two decades to reconfigure itself into a viable post-crisis economy. Which is not to say that Japanese stocks are a screaming buy right now, but which is to say that if you think that stocks in the US are cheap, maybe you could look across the Pacific and find some equally-attractive assets which are even cheaper. Or, to put it another way, the lesson of Japan is that even cheap stocks can continue to decline for decades.

The US will never again drive the global economy in the way it has done for the past 60 years, and the presence of multinationals on the Dow does not make it a proxy for world stock-market performance. Japan still accounts for a large chunk of global economic activity; it might makes sense, if you're not invested there already, to rotate some small part of your funds into a country which learned many painful lessons over the course of the 1990s. Assuming, that is, that you still have any faith at all in equities as an asset class.

Instead of rushing out and taking a risk on individual stocks, your play to bet on the return of the samurai, better yet the Japanese stocks is the iShares MSCI Japan Index Fund (AMEX: EWJ)

FUND SUMMARY  
The investment seeks to provide investment results that correspond generally to the price and yield performance of publicly traded securities in the Japanese market, as measured by the MSCI Japan index. The fund normally invests at least 95% of assets in the securities of its underlying index and in ADRs based on the securities in its underlying index. It uses a representative sampling strategy to try to track the index. The index consists of stocks traded primarily on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. It is nondiversified.
FUND OPERATIONS  
  EWJ Category Avg.
Total Expense Ratio 0.52% N/A
Annual Holdings Turnover 3% 3.44
Total Net Assets 6.66B 774.25M

 

SOURCE: http://www.portfolio.com/views/blogs/market-movers/2008/10/17/learning-from-japan

WallStNation.comThanks for visiting WallStNation.com, to assist your investing research try using our Search (click to access) or review the list of Tickers (click to access) that link directly to articles related to the given stock/security.

To Browse our Most Recent Stories (click here)


Share WallStNation.com Content

Share this article with others, WallStNation.com is the Independent Wall Street Newspaper. Thanks for Reading!

Daily Market Summary




Please Review the WallStNation.com Disclaimer and remember that information provided by our site is at the investor's sole financial risk. Please Review for more Details