By Lisa Twaronite
Japanese stocks gave up an early rally to turn negative Monday,
in the first trading session after Japanese voters handed the
opposition Democratic Party of Japan a landslide victory over the
long-ruling Liberal Democratic Party.
The Nikkei 225 Stock Average ended down 0.4% after opening
sharply higher and rising to an 11-month intraday high in the first
hour of trading. The broader Topix index of all issues on the Tokyo
Stock Exchange's First Section also shed 0.4%.
In other regional markets, South Korea's Kospi ended down 1%,
and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 and New Zealand's NZX-50 both
erased earlier gains and were down 0.2% and 0.4%, respectively.
The Shanghai Composite closed 6.7% lower on concerns of a fall
in bank lending, which helped drag Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index down
1.9% in late trading.
The DPJ won 308 seats, a vast majority of the 480 seats in the
lower house of parliament, compared with 115 seats previously. The
LDP's representation fell to 119 seats from 300, and the LDP's
coalition partner New Komeito's seats fell to 21 from 31.
The DPJ's victory over the LDP -- which has run the country
since 1955 for all but 11 months -- was widely expected. But
analysts said the large margin of victory was interpreted as an
initially positive sign, though not positive enough to sustain the
gains in a market some say already shows signs of overheating.
"For the stock markets, worried about delays to important
policies addressing population trends, the fact that the people
have expeditiously given power to politicians is better over the
long term than a narrow win," said Naoki Kamiyama, chief strategist
at Deutsche Bank in Tokyo.
Kamiyama said that the Topix had shot up by around 300 points
after the last election in September 2005, when former Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi sought and received a mandate to reform
Japan's economy. But, he said, this time could be different.
"Topix valuations are quite high at present, and market
expectations regarding the economy are weak. Unless investors
allocate greater resources to stocks, Japanese shares would not
appear to have much upward leeway," he said in a research note
early Monday.
"A switch in long-term political expectations to the positive
would likely spur a rise in the long-term trading range. Still, we
believe it will take at least a year to achieve a visible impact
even with solid leadership," said Kamiyama.
Beneficiaries of 'overwhelming mandate'
The DPJ has an ambitious agenda of increasing social programs --
including paying cash allowances of more than $3,000 per child to
families and abolishing highway tolls -- much of which is meant to
shift Japan to more a domestic-demand-led economy.
"On the assumption that the DPJ will use its overwhelming
mandate to rule at least in general accordance with its election
platform, domestic and green stocks from health care, child care,
and education to trucking, wind power, and batteries should
benefit. Railroads, construction firms, general contractors, and
tobacco could be on the losing side," said Cantor Fitzgerald
economist Uwe Parpart.
Parpart said potential gainers include Watami Co. , a restaurant
operator that also manages nursing-care facilities and makes box
lunches for senior citizens. Other picks include household products
maker Kao Corp. and transport firm Nippon Express Co. ;
Japan Wind Development Co. could benefit from the DPJ's emphasis
on seeking green solutions and alternative energy sources. Honda
Motor Co. (HMC) could also benefit from the DPJ's expected
continuation of government incentives to buy hybrid cars. Battery
maker GS Yuasa Corp. "may be worth another look," Parpart said.
"It will be a rough ride, but at least initially will be
stocks-positive and bonds-bearish, as the DPJ attempts to revive
domestic demand while ruling out new taxes to rein in growth of the
huge public debt," Parpart said in emailed comments.
More active role
A stronger yen also helped knock some of the wind out of the
stock market's earlier rally.
The dollar was buying 92.76 yen, down from 93.64 yen in late
North American trading on Friday, though some analysts said the
Japanese currency was unlikely to sustain its gains.
"The DPJ's capability to maintain the new cabinet, control Diet
affairs and reorganize budgets is a separate question, and markets
will assess these issues carefully. Thus, any Japanese-yen buying
on the DPJ's land-slide victory should prove short-lived," said
Tomoko Fujii, a rates and currency strategist at Bank of America
Securities-Merrill Lynch Japan, in a research note Monday.
In the longer term, one factor to which currency-market
investors should pay attention is the DPJ's vow to take a more
active role in policy-making.
The DPJ party leader Yukio Hatoyama, who will likely replace the
LDP's Taro Aso as Japan's next prime minister, pledged ahead of the
election that his government would seek to temper the power of
Japan's bureaucrats, who have traditionally held great sway over
formulating policy.
While ministers are politically appointed, there are often
viewed as wielding less power than the vice ministers, who rise up
through the bureaucratic ranks.
However, such a shift would likely take time, blunting its
immediate market impact.
"One cannot expect the Mandarins of the bureaucracy to simply
roll over for the incoming government, so important drivers for the
Japanese yen in the period ahead will likely be the generalized
risk-appetite of global investors and the machinations around the
fiscal half-year end for Japanese companies" at the end of
September, said Marc Chandler, head of global currency strategy at
Brown Brothers Harriman in New York, in emailed comments.