Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts

March 22, 2011

The tsunami reach on the global economy

On previous posts we have done a brief analysis on the devastating effects of the earthquake-tsunami combo on the Japanese economy. To have a more general and complete view of the events, one has to look at the other side of the story too, the collateral effects the damage suffered by Japan will have on the global economy. Over the last days we have heard words of relief from Japan's government and from analysts saying that the bite on Japanese GDP will not be as big as thought on first instance. But, no matter how fast the world's third biggest economy can recover from the disaster, the weight of said economy makes it impossible to dismiss the effects it  will have in the coming months (and is having as of now) on the march of the global economy.


Countries affected
The first wave to affect the global economy was a logic fund repatriation, specially from Japanese banks and insurance companies in need of liquidity to begin with reconstruction tasks at home. This initial repatriation made the yen go higher instead of immediately falling as expected, but this is not something to fear specially for the rest of the world. What some people are fearing is that Japanese mutual funds, hedge funds and instruments alike began to massively withdraw their positions over the rest of the world to take their money back home. If this movement is done gradually no significant damage would be done, Japanese money would simply be substituted by somebody else's money. But if this repatriation was to be done massively it would pose an important threat, specially for emerging markets. Emerging markets usually rely on bigger economies' capital to fund their growth, to the point where a runaway of Japanese money could partly derail short-term growth expectations for some emerging markets. I am not talking China, Russia or Brazil here which are exposed but big enough to not notice a heavy change. I am talking about smaller markets like South Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Malaysia, Thailand, South Africa or Chile.

March 16, 2011

Uphill battle for Japan. How can they fight it?

While the situation is extremely tense in Japan at the moment with all eyes set on the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant, the Japanese markets are open and the obvious, not ethic at all but expected nonetheless, has happened. The Nikkei plummeted more than 11% in the earthquake's aftermath just to regain more than 5% today. Japan is now officially the playground for avid speculators and this can do no good to the forthcoming Japan recovery. 
It is quite difficult to ask for stability in the markets when the country itself is still (literally) shaking, but investors and speculators should leave Japan some room to breath, for the greater good. Japan is still one of the biggest economies worldwide; playing against it just to make some easy money now is quite a stupid, short-sighted and naive thing to do and could have heavy consequences in the future. But we know human stupidity is second only to human greed, and that you cannot expect nothing good from the same people that invented subprime-mortgage-backed securities and thus brought the world economy to its knees... So let us analyze what Japan can do from here on.
Credit: Yahoo! Finance

Japan's instruments for recovery
Japan's economy is one of a kind, after booming heavily during the eighties, it entered a phase the Japanese call "The lost decade", stagflation after their asset bubble burst has plagued the economy since then. The global crisis we have been suffering since 2008 has not helped Japan totally get out of their slump at all, even though before said crisis Japan showed promising signs of recovery with GDP growths better than Europe or the US. Still, Japan is the world's third biggest economy after USA and China so it will not be bare-handed through its long, hard, recovery.

March 11, 2011

Japan's earthquake biggest replica: the economic one

First of all, my thoughts are with the Japanese people in these difficult moments. I am sure being such a hard-working, disciplined and respectful country they will have no (unmanageable) problems getting over it very soon. 

Earthquakes as big as the one that hit Japan last night are always followed by numerous replicas of different strength. These replicas can last for several days until the tectonic plates 'settle down' again. Well, we have begun to see what can be the biggest and more widespread replicas of said earthquake: the economic one. Few hours have passed since the disaster and we can already see the effects on the markets: oil prices, gold and stocks go steeply down and the german bond and the US dollar go up. Pure textbook reaction.