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  • Japan's Economic Miracles: Next One Coming Soon?  [View article]
    Greater China (including Hong Kong) surpassed the US as China's greatest trading partner way back in 2004, accounting for 20.1% of Japan's trade versus 19% for the US. In 2007, China excluding Hong Kong surpassed the US as Japan's largest trading partner.
    It is also the largest importer of Japanese goods.

    Moreover, China was responsible for 38% of Japan's economic growth in 2002, but this surged to 68% in 2006.

    While a good deal of China's output is exported to the the US and Europe, Japan has become a major export market as well. Thus while it can be argued that a good deal of Japan's exports to China are simply re-exported to the US and Europe, let's put the myth to bed that the US is still Japan's largest trading partner.
    Jul 21 22:41 pm |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Pricing Japanese Banks for Bankruptcy is Overdoing It  [View article]
    Dear William;

    I don't know what your source of data is, but the source of the data for my comments was the Kabushiki Shimbun website
    (www.kabushiki.co.jp/ma...), which carries daily TSE 1 sector quotes as well as forward PER and historical PBR and Dvd Yield for 33 sectors. They calculate PBR using the latest full fiscal year consolidated shareholders' equity per share, and the bank sector Arithmatic Stock Price Average.

    The Tokyo Stock Exchange also publishes monthly PER and PBR data based on the TSE 1 Arithmatic Stock Price Indices. At the end of December, the book value per share for the TSE 1 Bank sector as calculated by the exchange (on a consolidated basis) was JPY650.80 per share, while the Arithmatic Stock Price Index for the Banks was JPY539.04, resulting in a PBR of 0.83 at the end of December 2007.

    The Arithmatic Stock Price Index for the Banks recently fell to the JPY240 level, which works out to a PBR of 0.37X, implying that the Kabushiki Shimbun data is not in error.

    Thus I fail to see how my comments could be construed as "sloppy" based on this data. Rather than going into a long explanation about whether the arithmatic stock price averages are better or worse than Topix indices or the Nikkei 225 indices, I believe my point is still valid, i.e., Japanese bank stocks are in aggregate at extremely oversold levels.




    Jan 28 21:39 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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