Japan

Brief Japan: Politics, Uncertainty and Bad Policy: The Third Wheels of Profits and the Investment Cycle and more

In this briefing:

  1. Politics, Uncertainty and Bad Policy: The Third Wheels of Profits and the Investment Cycle
  2. Sell Lenovo: Profit Is an Illusion, Liabilities Are Rising and There Is Little Real Equity Value
  3. Alps Alpine Buyback Proceeding Apace
  4. China – Eurozone Negative Feedback Loop.
  5. Smartkarma’s Week that Was in JP/​​​​KR: Yahoo Japan, Nexon, Kosaido and LG Electronics

1. Politics, Uncertainty and Bad Policy: The Third Wheels of Profits and the Investment Cycle

G%20logic

Our positive view of the Asian region in 2018 was not reflected in stock market performance. But now is not the time to discard fundamentals and fundamental analysis. Unlike the US, the Asian region is in the early stages of a profit upcycle. As we have argued on many occasions, that is the building block required to kick start the investment cycle. But theoretical explanations of the growth process aside, is there any empirical support for the argument that profits and investment, and therefore growth, are related? We would answer in the affirmative and, in the following report, we try to show how the process works and where Asia stands on two of our Austrian Stress Indicators (ASIs). Market volatility aside, the conditions for good growth gains are firmly in place in most of the region.

2. Sell Lenovo: Profit Is an Illusion, Liabilities Are Rising and There Is Little Real Equity Value

In Q3, Lenovo (992 HK) reported revenue growth – well ahead of market expectations, improved margins and US$1.9bn of cashflow.  This was a considerable surprise to us – and the market.  However, having analysed the results, most of the reported revenue and profit growth comes from the Fujitsu Ltd (6702 JP) acquisition. The rise in cashflow largely came from working capital, but also benefitted from the structure of the Fujitsu deal. We think real full-year cashflow after investment, US$0.8bn, will yet again, fail to cover finance costs and dividends, and Lenovo will need to borrow another US$400m.

3. Alps Alpine Buyback Proceeding Apace

Late last year, in the final run-up to the vote to determine whether Alpine (6816 JP) investors would subject themselves to a bad share exchange ratio or would choose to oblige Alps (6770 JP) to have another run at it in a different format, Alps announced a shareholder return policy which included buying back ¥40 billion of shares. 

It is to be noted that this meant that the combined entity was going to be left with less cash than the total deemed necessary by the two companies just a very short while before. Why? Because Alps – with the strong governance it has – obviously had the right amount – and Alpine also had the right amount (it needed substantial equity-funded cash as “working capital” because otherwise it would run a serious danger of business disruption and deterioration. So despite this severe business risk, the two companies effectively announced they would disburse 90% of Alpine’s cash on hand to shareholders POST-MERGER through the special dividend offered to sweeten the pot to get the merger through, and the ¥40 billion buyback. 

The merger, of course, went through, and the ¥28.4 billion* buyback is proceeding apace.

4. China – Eurozone Negative Feedback Loop.

Historically, Germany and China have depended on exports to lead growth. With the US unwilling to play the role of consumer of last resort and being determined to limit its current account deficit,  this avenue is not available anymore. In the absence of a rethink by German policy makers as to how to make German growth more self -sustaining a deflationary feedback loop is developing between the EU and China. 

5. Smartkarma’s Week that Was in JP/​​​​KR: Yahoo Japan, Nexon, Kosaido and LG Electronics

Below is the list of the Japan/Korea-related posts put on the Smartkarma platform during the week of February 25th:

Insight

Insight Provider

Published

Japan

 

 

25/02/2019

26/02/2019

26/02/2019

27/02/2019

27/02/2019

28/02/2019

28/02/2019

28/02/2019

28/02/2019

1/3/2019

1/3/2019

1/3/2019

1/3/2019

2/3/2019

3/3/2019

 

 

 

South Korea

 

 

25/02/2019

25/02/2019

26/02/2019

26/02/2019

26/02/2019

27/02/2019

27/02/2019

28/02/2019

1/3/2019

3/3/2019

 

 

 

Japan/South Korea

 

 

28/02/2019

 

 

 

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