Japan Strategist Roundtable: Kikuchi on the Progress of Abenomics

As part of a trip to Japan in early September, I had the pleasure of attending the Mizuho Japan Investment Forum. The conference included sessions with government officials who lead and advise Prime Minister Abe’s economic agenda, a head of the statistics department at the Bank of Japan (BOJ), professors and companies. The conference was very educational. I also had the opportunity to speak with a number of Mizuho’s strategists, including Masatoshi Kikuchi, the Pan-Asia chief equity strategist at Mizuho Securities Equity Research. Below are the most salient points from my discussion with Mr. Kikuchi.

Question: The government has discussed lowering corporate tax rates. How do you think this will progress? And will it also raise the consumption tax from 8% to 10% as planned?

Kikuchi: I think the government will cut the corporate tax rate 2% every two years over a period of six years—to target Germany levels of taxes over a period of several years. Twenty-five percent is the Asian average tax, and Japan’s government says it is not necessarily competing with other Asian companies, so we may not get down to 25%.

On the other hand, to not raise the consumption tax, the government needs to change the law. Technically, it already has been decided really, and it will be complicated politically to go back and get a new law to reverse the rise in the consumption tax.

Furthermore, the market opinion is that it will go through, and this matters to the Abe government. I did a survey on several global investors. The survey showed 80% of investors expect a hike in the consumption tax. If the government postpones the hike, I think the market will be disappointed; therefore I think the hike happens as planned.

The government, of course, needs to come up with stimulus measures to push it forward. It will come up with a supplementary fiscal budget. The government also has plans to change the Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) asset mix, and there is a special committee to publish corporate governance code. I think these are three weapons to prop up the stock market even with the consumption tax hike.

Question: What is your outlook for the markets?

Kikuchi: I have a stock market outlook through next fiscal year. I think we will see a strong market through the middle of next year. But the bull market has lasted more than five years, and we may see correction with the hike of U.S. interest rates, which I believe is likely to occur in the middle of next year. There is an LDP [Liberal Democratic Party] presidential election in September next year. Stock market prices are important to Abe, and he will try to keep strong prices until then.

Question: There has been some discussion of expanding tax-deferred savings accounts beyond the Nippon Individual Savings Account (NISA).

Kikuchi: Already the government is discussing increasing the contribution limits 20% for the existing NISA (to 1.2 million yen per individual per year), while also allowing NISA to be set up for children (up to 80,000 yen per child).