Japanese Small Caps: The Local Opportunity

For the first five months of 2014, Japanese equities1 didn’t deliver compelling performance, yet economic conditions in Japan, thanks to Abenomics, are looking better and better. We notice that many of Japan’s largest, most globally oriented firms don’t trade strictly on what’s going on in Japan, though, and their share prices are heavily influenced by developments around the world. We believe that small-cap Japanese stocks may offer greater sensitivity to the local economy. And the evidence is encouraging: small caps are currently outperforming their more global brethren in the large-cap space. Thus, we believe that fears about Japan’s consumption tax hike derailing Japan’s local economy are misplaced, since small caps are much more heavily dependent on actual Japanese consumption.

WisdomTree has an array of Indexes focused on different parts of Japanese equity markets.

Performance in 2014 through May 31, 2014

WisdomTree Japan SmallCap Dividend Index (Japan SmallCaps Unhedged): 0.72%. Click here for full Index performance.
WisdomTree Japan Hedged SmallCap Equity Index (Japan SmallCaps Hedged ): -3.21%. Click here for full Index performance.
WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Index (Japan Global Exporters Hedged): -5.34%. Click here for full Index performance.

While past performance does not guarantee future results, it’s important to note that, over this period, the Japanese yen has appreciated approximately 3.5% versus the U.S. dollar, explaining the majority of the performance difference between Japan SmallCaps Unhedged, which benefits from an appreciating yen—and Japan SmallCaps Hedged, which does not. Even so, both of these Indexes have provided some mitigation of negative performance compared to Japan Global Exporters Hedged—the most globally sensitive of the three Indexes shown.

Japan Small Caps Since 2006

One five-month period is not enough to serve as the foundation for too many conclusions, but one Index on this list—Japan SmallCaps Unhedged—has been around since 2006, giving us the ability to look at nearly eight years of performance and to include the impact of the 2008–09 global financial crisis.

Evolution of Sector Exposures

Japan SmallCaps Unhedged is focused on dividend payers. Unlike U.S. small caps2, where only roughly half of broad-based small-cap indexes paid at least one dividend over the prior 12 months, in Japan the figure was nearly 96% (as of 5/31/14).

Going back to 2006, the Consumer Discretionary and Industrials sectors have tended to garner the largest weights—each over 20% on average. While intuition may suggest that a dividend-focused approach would tilt heavily toward defensive sectors, what we’ve seen in this particular segment of the market is that the strategy has tended to largely avoid Utilities and Telecom, have less than 5% weight in Health Care and have approximately 11.3% exposure, on average, in Consumer Staples.3

The Japanese Consumer vs. the Global Consumer

In Japan, a differentiator of small-cap exposure is local-revenue sensitivity. In Japan SmallCaps Unhedged, for example, weighted average revenue from within Japan for constituents in the Consumer Discretionary sector was more than 80%.4 This is very different from the picture painted by Japan Global Exporters Hedged, which saw 34%.5 The conclusion: While both Indexes have significant exposure to Consumer Discretionary stocks, one is a play on the Japanese consumer, whereas the other is more of a play on the global consumer.