Japan Appears To Be Following In Zimbabwe’s Footsteps

 | Jul 01, 2016 02:59AM ET

Recently Japanese equity markets were hit by an ‘earthquake’. The biggest bank in Japan – Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (BOTM) – resigned of his primary dealer status. The reason for such decision is the structure of government debt which can be described as a huge speculative bubble. Who inflated it? The Bank of Japan through countless interventions. Tokio is a leader of zero or negative interest rates scaring any small investor away from the debt market. Today even 10-Year bonds are sold with a negative interest rate – a guaranteed loss.

In the long-term, the situation we see today in bonds is not sustainable. Prices are too high, owners of government debt can lose a lot of money in case of a rate hike or even slight change of the BOJ policy. The price drop is going to hurt more the longer the maturity of the respective bond. Subsequent sell-off of such asset with higher price has low chances of success and bears a lot of risks. This is why banks having the privilege of being a dealer of government bonds resign of such status.

What does it mean to have a ‘primary dealer’ status?

Thanks to this a commercial bank is able to be the middleman in a transaction of selling bonds between the government and investors. As a primary dealer you have to provide liquidity in the debt market – invest share of your capital in bonds. Apart from serving buy/sell orders, buying bonds you also have to prevent the price from collapsing (when there are not enough buyers). This is called market making.

Being a primary dealer is nothing else than to cooperate with politicians and economists of the central bank. Knowing terms like the price and the amount of debt sold, enables commercial banks to enjoy a privileged position. Bank gets access to important information used every day to trade around the globe, premiums paid by investors but - given that the government requires pension funds (and other dependent institutions) to buy bonds - you don’t even need to look for clients.

Why BOTM resigns of its primary dealer status?

Why BOTM is resigning, if it is so good? The pricing of Japanese debt reached the level of absurdity. Japanese government asks for money for the privilege of entrusting them with capital. The investor is bound to lose money unless he finds somehow a way to sell the bond at a higher price. In a normal situation, the interest rate is paid on the risk of insolvency of the issuer and this is how the investor is rewarded for lending money. The risk of insolvency is low but still exists. Interest rates are higher the bigger problems of the country-issuer. For example: Greek 10-year bonds – 7.8%, Polish – 3.2%, American – 1.6%.

You can ask a question then: if Japan is not offering any money does it mean Japan’s bankruptcy is impossible? Of course not. The state having 230% debt to GDP ratio and facing terrible demographic and energy problems can go bankrupt any moment. The price of government bonds is a variable of machinations and rounds of JPY printing. In addition to this, the margin for bond price growth is very limited but there is plenty of room for a nose dive. In the scenario that interest rate on 10-year bonds increases by 2% - it happened in 2012 – prices would drop by 20%. In the worse scenario of returning to high interest rates (7%), prices could plunge even 70%! The longer the duration of a bond the bigger volatility. Being a primary dealer you are obliged to keep at least 4% of your balance in bonds – the same bonds that are systematically losing money. This is why being a middle-man in this case is a growing burden with huge risks.

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Debt market in Japan

Commercial banks have on their balance sheets bonds worth 229 trillion yen (2.13 trillion USD). This is 30% less than just two years earlier. The one responsible for that is the BOJ which continues to issue more debt and prints currency against the opposition from commercial banks. Today the BOJ increases its position in bonds by 80 trillion JPY (744 billion USD) each year. As a result, the central bank is the owner of the biggest share of Japanese bonds in the world and holds more than the rest of institutions combined.

The BOJ buys not only the debt of government but also expands its position in ETFs (red) – investment funds – now it equals more than 50% of the whole market (blue). The BOJ is now the biggest hedge fund in the world.