by smiley » Tue 28 Feb 2012, 17:30:29
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '1')1 years and counting. Still waiting for Japanese financial doomsday to arrive.
Very true, Japan has a long history of indebtness and people crying wolf only to make a fool of themselves. And quite possibly someone like you will point at this post several years forward to argue that Japan is not on the verge of collapsing.
However I see one reason why this time might be different. Japan has always got away with its debt because its strong industrial and financial base. The government and the country are not seperate entities its the aggregate which counts. Whether the government extracts money from the country via taxes or via loans, does not make a difference short term. The bills get payed in the end.
The problem now is that this base seems faltering. This process has been longer underway, but has hit the accelerator after the tsunami. Both the trade balance as well as the current account balance are now in the red. This means that for the first time in recent history Japan cannot rely on domestic investors to buy their debt, but increasingly needs foreign investors to step in as well.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')But persuading more foreign buyers that JGBs are a sound longer-term investment could prove “critical” in supporting prices this year, says Christian Carrillo, Tokyo-based head of Asia-Pacific interest-rate strategy at Société Générale. By Mr Carrillo’s “guesstimates,” overseas investors will account for Y12.5tn of net JGB demand in the coming fiscal year – more than banks (Y12tn), insurers (Y9tn) and the Bank of Japan (Y9.5tn)
The influx of foreign investors in JGBs IMHO represents represents something which could change the rules of the game and make the goverment debt very real.