Steven Towns
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Time Again To Trade The Collapse Of The Yen [View article]
Japanese Yen: A Red Dawn? [View article]
Japanese Yen: A Red Dawn? [View article]
Japanese Yen: A Red Dawn? [View article]
Japanese Investors Saying 'No Thanks' to Government Bonds [View article]
On Nov 05 03:40 PM dieuwer wrote:
> Local deflation should be meaningless to local Japanese investors.
>
> So what there was deflation from 1990 - 2000? Japanese could have
> invested in NASDAQ stock and make a 10-fold gain.
> So what there supposedly is deflation since 2000 again. Japanese
> could have invested in gold and commodity stocks and make a fat gain.
Japanese Investors Saying 'No Thanks' to Government Bonds [View article]
On Nov 05 12:33 PM user225084-justme wrote:
> >>The Mainichi Shimbun (original in Japanese) reported early Thursday
> that Japanese Government Bonds’ (JGBs) popularity is rapidly falling
> among individual investors.
>
> How did the report arrive at the conclusion made that the bonds popularity
> is rapidly falling??
Japanese Investors Saying 'No Thanks' to Government Bonds [View article]
On Nov 05 12:24 PM Donald Ingram wrote:
> Other factors are to be considered besides low returns;
> 1/ An aging work force.
> 2/ A much lower savings rate.
> 3/ High unemployment.
> 4/ Collapsing export market.
> 5/ Diminished tax returns.
> 6/ Crushing social obligations.
> 7/ New, inexperienced government.
>
> To put forward your reasoning as just the poor rate of return, vis
> a vis the low interest rate, is to ignore the above mitigating factors.
A Look at Japanese Stock Valuations [View article]
On Jun 05 12:27 AM doubleguns wrote:
> Japan changes prime ministers like Madona changes panties, leaving
> them with no leadership. As soon as they start to move in any direction
> a new captain is placed at the helm and he steers in another direction.
>
>
> Thier stock market will just flail around until some leadership establishes
> a direction for the economy and is allow to stay on course.
>
> The only reason they have not ran aground so far is they have stimulated
> the hell out of the economy to the point that the debt is 100% of
> GDP
>
> It would seem the master (seekingalpha.com/symbo...) is now
> taking lessons from the student (Japan).
Outlook for Japanese Stocks: A Rising Sun [View article]
Will the Japan Plan Work? [View article]
Japan's Nikkei: Black Hole or Buying Opportunity? [View article]
Why Hasn't the Bank of Japan Intervened to Weaken the Yen? [View article]
Japan's Largest Private Equity Firm? The Mob [View article]
Nikkei Weekly Outlook: Eye on I-banks, Inflation and the Yen [View article]
Agreed re. the stubborn heights of some of the readings we've seen. Surely they'll ease, although it is comforting to see the resiliency in Japan now, compared to the past when it was almost knee-jerk with the N225 seeming to mirror the direction of the S&P 500. That said, still a ways to go to get back to last year's levels, but it's upside nonetheless. Widespread buying on bouts of weakness not a bad thing at all.
Is a Nikkei 225 Bottom Near? [View article]