According to Tanaka, funds in the country rapidly increased investment in foreign securities over the course of July. Acquisition of non-Japanese assets had been slowing from April to June before the spike.
He saw two potential reasons for the development:
Buying the Downturn Tanaka speculated that the pension funds "may have taken advantage of the opportunity created by the sudden drop in the USD/JPY to the ¥120 level in the wake of the Greek and Chinese troubles."
He believes that pension activity will continue to support the USD/JPY around the low-120s "going forward."
Merger
Tanaka also highlighted,
however, the upcoming incorporation of three of Japan's largest mutual
funds -- with a combined ¥33 trillion under management -- into the
country's Government Pension Investment Fund in October. He posited that
these firms could be moving aggressively to match their asset allotment
with that of the GPIF before the merger.
The strategist highlighted that
in March, the three mutual funds had much less exposure to both domestic
and foreign equities than did the government fund. Many experts at the
time predicted that the private funds would try to "catch up" by
September.
But given the fact that foreign
investment slowed from April to June, Tanaka said that it's unclear
"whether the sudden burst in foreign securities purchasing by the
pensions last month was simply buying on dips or preparation for the
October merger."
Tanaka projects that the
USD/JPY, supported by pension activity, will rise steadily in
anticipation of a Fed rate hike to somewhere within the ¥125-130 range.
From there, he expects increased volatility.
Culled from Benzinga in Yahoo Finance
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