For Japanese consumers, inflation is painful, as wage increases have yet to catch up with the rising cost of living. Inflation also raises procurement costs for businesses and leads to tighter monetary policy and higher borrowing costs. However, pushing the Japanese economy out of the flat-price, zero-interest comfort zone may be exactly why profound changes are taking place.
Companies that have long been reluctant to raise prices for fear of being undercut by competitors are no longer absorbing rising costs by squeezing their own profit margins. Instead, they are passing on higher prices to customers. This started with companies more exposed to imported materials, such as paper mills and steelmakers, which helped support higher stock prices. Now, even domestically oriented industries are doing the same, causing the CPI to catch up with producer price inflation.
Workers are unlikely to remain content with the miniscule wage increases they have endured for decades, particularly as the working-age population is shrinking. At some point, we anticipate real wages to turn positive, resulting in more spending power.
Consumers are also likely to move their savings from bank deposits, which pay virtually no interest, to higher-yielding assets. According to the Bank of Japan (BOJ), Japanese households held some 2,043 trillion yen of financial assets as of the end of March, 54% of which were in bank deposits and just 11% in equities. Even a small change in those percentages can translate into huge stock market inflows; a major expansion of Japan’s individual saving account scheme, nicknamed NISA, in 2024 makes this a distinct possibility.
Companies Poised to Redeploy Cash Piles
Faced with a shrinking labor force, potentially higher wages and a higher cost of capital, corporations must boost productivity. This, in our view, is creating opportunities in industries such as IT services and human resource services.
Corporations must also do something with their cash piles. Companies representing 53.5% of Japan’s market capitalization had a net cash position on their balance sheets at the end of 2022, compared with 39.4% in the US and 22.8% in the eurozone (Display). Dividend payouts and stock buybacks, which both return cash to shareholders, had already been increasing over the past decade, but—more importantly—we believe that inflation will make it easier for management to find ways to better reinvest cash to grow their businesses. And after several rounds of reform starting with the 2014 Stewardship Code, corporate governance has improved, and managements are taking a more disciplined approach to capital deployment.