Foreign investors dump most Japan stocks since SVB collapse

Foreign investors dump most Japan stocks since SVB collapse
US interest rates continue to impact foreign equity markets.
SEP 28, 2023
By  Bloomberg

Foreign investors sold the largest amount of Japanese stocks since March last week amid signs of risk aversion. 

They dumped ¥913 billion ($6.1 billion) of equities, more than three times as much as the previous week, data from Japan Exchange Group Inc. showed. It was the biggest sales on a net basis since the week ended March 10, when the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank shook markets globally. Japan’s Topix index fell 2.2% last week, while in the US, the S&P 500 Index lost 2.9%.

The increased selling is a sign that appetite from foreign investors has waned, after a massive ¥6.1 trillion of purchases last quarter, as the market become more expensive after a strong rally.

“A rise in US interest rates is hurting sentiment,” said Toshiya Matsunami, chief analyst at Nissay Asset Management. “Foreign investors tend to reduce risk exposure and take profits on assets that have done well when US stocks are falling.” 

The Topix hit a 33-year high earlier this month on hopes inflation will return to the world’s third-biggest economy and that growth will strengthen, on top of expectations of governance reforms and a boost from a cheap yen for exporters.

The surge has boosted valuations for the Japanese market, with the Topix now trading at 14.8 times expected earnings, at premium over the MSCI Asia-Pacific index which is at 13.3 times. At the start of year, the Topix had a lower multiple than the pan-Asian index.

Taking into account futures contracts, overseas investors sold ¥1.25 trillion yen of equities, also the most on a weekly basis since March. In the other side of the equation Japanese individual investors bought a net ¥661 billion, the most since late March.

Latest News

Mercer Advisors lands third-biggest deal to date with Full Sail Capital
Mercer Advisors lands third-biggest deal to date with Full Sail Capital

With over 600 clients, the $71 billion RIA acquirer's latest partner marks its second transaction in Oklahoma.

Fintech bytes: FP Alpha rolls out estate insights feature
Fintech bytes: FP Alpha rolls out estate insights feature

Also, wealth.com enters Commonwealth's tech stack, while Tifin@work deepens an expanded partnership.

Morgan Stanley, Atria job cut details emerge
Morgan Stanley, Atria job cut details emerge

Back office workers and support staff are particularly vulnerable when big broker-dealers lay off staff.

Envestnet taps Atria alum Sean Meighan to sharpen RIA focus
Envestnet taps Atria alum Sean Meighan to sharpen RIA focus

The fintech giant is doubling down on its strategy to reach independent advisors through a newly created leadership role.

LPL, Evercore welcome West Coast breakaways
LPL, Evercore welcome West Coast breakaways

The two firms are strengthening their presence in California with advisor teams from RBC and Silicon Valley Bank.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave

SPONSORED The evolution of private credit

From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.