Japan ETFs

WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Fund (NYSEArca: DXJ) has been getting a lot of press lately with the ETF’s currency-hedged strategy is in the sweet spot as Japanese stocks rally and the yen plumbs multiyear lows.

However, DXJ was falling harder than unhedged ETFs on Friday morning as the yen strengthened versus the U.S. dollar.

Yet the recent trend for DXJ and other Japan equity ETFs has been higher as Shinzo Abe takes over as prime minister. He plans on following through with devaluing the yen to boost Japan’s exporters and struggling economy.

“The Japanese equity markets have been in a bear market or sideways market since 2006-07 so the optimism could lead to real momentum, if change is successfully implemented by the new government,” Daniel Weiskopf, a principal at Forefront Capital in New York, said in a report this week. [Specialized Japan ETF Doubles in Size as Yen Weakens]

The Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa announced he is going to resign early, before his term ends. Prime Minster Shinzo Abe will be appointed as early as next week, and will follow through with promises to weaken the yen, reports Trang Ho for Investor’s Business Daily.

The yen focused Guggenheim CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust (NYSEArca: FXY) has already plunged 19% over the past year, signifying the dip in value of the currency. FXY was up more than 1% in Friday’s premarket. [Japanese Yen ETFs and the Carry Trade]

Meanwhile, DXJ was off 1.4% before the bell. The ETF has soared nearly 30% the past three months on rising Japanese stocks and a falling yen.

The unhedged iShares MSCI Japan Index (NYSEArca: EWJ) recently hit a 10-month high, reports Ho. Investors can expect Japanese equities to make gains as the currency loses steam. The safe haven appeal of the yen is diminishing as the economic stimulus settles in.