Windsor Star

BlackRock banking on Japanese equities

- KEIKO UJIKANE AND TOSHIRO HASEGAWA

BlackRock Inc. favours Japanese equities second only to emerging-market stocks because the nation’s corporate earnings look solid and share valuations are more attractive than in the U.S.

“We are overweight­ing equities in emerging markets, Japan, Asia and Europe,” Takeshi Fukushima, chief investment officer at the Japan unit of BlackRock, the world’s largest money manager, said this week in Tokyo.

“That’s not just because the economies are good in those regions, but also they have their own stories. In Japan’s case, corporate earnings are becoming stronger.”

Japan’s benchmark Topix index has rallied 20 per cent this year as global growth has helped generate record Japanese corporate profits. Higher local earnings amid a sustained global economic recovery will boost the Topix to 2,050 by the end of next year, according to JPMorgan Securities. That would be a 12 per cent gain from Thursday’s close.

The estimated price-toearnings ratio for Japan is 15 times for this year, compared with 20 times for the U.S. and 16 times for Europe, based on MSCI Inc. indexes.

Even as Japanese stocks have rallied, valuations haven’t changed much from earlier this year, because investors weren’t aware that companies would have such strong earnings, Fukushima said.

Earnings in the JulySeptem­ber period were above consensus forecasts and positive surprises outweighed negative for the sixth consecutiv­e quarter, according to a report by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. last month.

“The fact that Japan’s economy is in good shape hasn’t yet been conveyed and overseas investors still have the old image” of stagnation, Fukushima said.

“Global investors are still underweigh­ting Japanese stocks” so they may review their stance on Japanese equities.

Possible headwinds include any breakdown in talks on the North American Free Trade Agreement. That would be an ominous sign for global trade, leading to a stronger yen and hurting Japanese exportrela­ted shares, Fukushima said, though he puts the odds of that scenario playing out at 20 per cent.

BlackRock’s preferred plays are domestic demand-related value stocks, such as retailers and services, as well as technology shares, according to Fukushima.

The company also is interested in small-to-medium sized companies that focus on laboursavi­ng investment, those which benefit from a rise in foreign tourists, and increased participat­ion of women and the elderly in the labour force.

While BlackRock likes technology and financial shares globally, it is “neutral” on Japanese bank shares as they lack a positive story on their earnings, he said.

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