Follow Buffett into Japan

Sep 15th, 2020 | By | Category: Equities

By Jeremy Schwartz, Executive Vice President, Global Head of Research, WisdomTree.

Jeremy Schwartz WisdomTree

Jeremy Schwartz, Global Head of Research at WisdomTree.

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway recently purchased 5% stakes in five Japanese general trading firms, known as “sogo shosha.”

Jesper Koll, WisdomTree’s Japan Strategist, believes a number of considerations beyond the traditional inexpensive valuations and great cash flow motivated Buffett’s purchases:

  • Sogo shosha can be a great inflation hedge. They are an integral part of global markets for commodities, both soft and hard. Shares typically track inflation, which is important as many investors are now looking for good inflation hedges.
  • Sogo shosha are dominant venture capital firms in Japan. They see every deal. Buffett is buying one of the best filters for Japan and innovative Asian start-ups.
  • There’s geo-strategic upside. As the technology cold war between the US and China intensifies, Japan is poised to become a big winner. Sogo shosha will be key dealmakers as global companies are forced to switch from Chinese suppliers to Japanese ones.
  • Sogo shosha are at the forefront of Japan’s shift away from seniority-based to performance-based pay.

All said, Buffett’s purchase serves as a reminder that there are good values to be had outside the US.

Below I review some broader portfolio applications of Buffett’s “Buy Japan” strategy, and why investors may want to follow his lead.

Japan ETF

FEATURED PRODUCT

WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Fund
(DXJ US)

– Provides broad equity exposure to
Japanese dividend-paying companies with
an exporter tilt.

– Currency hedging mitigates exposure to
fluctuations of the Japanese yen.

– Houses over $1.5bn AUM; Comes with an
expense ratio of 0.48%.

– Listed on NYSE Arca.

WisdomTree has a dividend-weighted basket of Japanese companies called the WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Fund (DXJ US). DXJ currently gives more weight to these soga shosha than market-cap-weighted Japan indexes, thanks to their current high dividend levels.

DXJ owns four of the five companies Buffett bought at a weight of 6% of its portfolio, compared to just 3.5% for the five companies in the MSCI Japan Index.

These sogo shosha have prices that average 79% of their book value, with four of the five below 85% of book value. If you believe in the quality of that book value, you’re buying an asset for less than liquidation value that is providing nice current cash flows via dividends and buybacks.

These five new Buffett holdings also currently trade at 4 times cash flow, for a 25% average cash-flow yield.

As of August 31, DXJ had a price-to-cash-flow multiple of 7.8 times, or an approximate 13% cash flow yield—not far from the Buffett basket.

The US market and the S&P 500 Index, by contrast, has a price-to-cash flow of over 16 times, with a cash flow yield of just 6%, which is 75% below the cash flow levels of Japanese corporates in Buffett’s Japan portfolio.

The current dividend yield of DXJ, while lower than Buffett’s Japan portfolio, is now approaching twice the level of the S&P 500, at over 3%. Japan was not known as a high dividend country for decades. But a renewed focus on returning cash to shareholders and improving returns on equity have made Japan a dividend growth leader. While S&P 500 dividends grew 10% a year for the last decade, and prices appreciated with that dividend growth, Japanese dividends grew 8.5% a year for the last decade and, generally, prices were up less (about 7%).

Valuations comparison

Source: WisdomTree.

Japanese Valuations

Stepping back, Japanese equity valuations have been contracting for the last three decades. Following the peak of the Nikkei at nearly 40,000 at the end of 1989, to just over 23,000 more than 30 years later, valuations have continually compressed.

In the early 1990s, Japan traded at over 60 times earnings, when the S&P 500 was below 20 times earnings. Now the US market is in vogue with expanding multiples, while Japanese valuations languish.

Japan was trading at similar multiples as the S&P 500 following the great recession in 2009 from 2011–15. But starting five years ago, the S&P 500 de-coupled, led by the large technology stocks that fueled a rise in the S&P 500’s earnings multiple.

As of August 31, the S&P 500 had a P/E ratio of 26 times, while the MSCI Japan’s was 18 times and DXJ’s was 16 times.

Source: WisdomTree.

Japan clearly should trade at a lower multiple given different sector compositions and growth profiles. But its exposure is aligned for a re-opening of the global economy given the cyclical nature of corporate Japan. The nation is highly leveraged to global growth, with an emphasis on Industrials and Consumer Cyclical companies. Global fiscal stimulus should support it following the coronavirus pandemic.

While the US markets are generally ‘priced for perfection,’ Japan is trading at its lowest multiples in decades with a potential for positive catalysts—renewed global growth, an under-owned market, and now the ultimate value investor stepping in that could restore confidence in Japanese assets.

Buffett engaged in a very interesting yen-denominated bond issuance last year—raising ¥430 billion of yen-denominated bonds (over $4 billion). If the yen declines in value, his debt will decline in US dollar terms, offsetting any losses that come from being inherently long the yen when buying these stocks. This allows Buffett to isolate the true ‘equity opportunity’ without having to navigate a separate currency bet.

We believe investors should consider following this type of approach, too. DXJ incorporates that currency hedge to neutralize movements of the yen and help investors focus on the potential gains of Japanese stocks.

(The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of ETF Strategy.)

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