TokyoBoglehead wrote: ↑Fri Mar 03, 2023 12:18 pm
A rise in JPY could easily wipe any profit an investor was expecting when it comes to foreign bonds. A Japanese investor must be conscious of the fact that foreign bonds are not necessarily a "safer" investment.
Currency risk is there for any sort of foreign asset, I suppose we can say stocks return more than bonds generally, but if the currency rate went against one it could eliminate gains for stocks too. At least in the short run.
These days I am unfazed about the yen. The central bank is printing loads of it, and I don’t see much to brighten Japan’s economic prospects. Quite happy to invest in foreign assets (and precious metals etc) given my exposure otherwise to Japan and the yen (home ownership and salary income).
It is very possible for a rise in the Yen to demolish any expected returns in real terms.
Possible yes, but how likely?
With so much public debt and no signs of attempts to stabilize it, I can only see prolonged money printing in Japan, so the best the yen gets is a temporary reprieve, in my view. This could be something like a 20% gain in value, due to speculative fluctuations in the currency markets, but having a long term horizon (10 years +) I expect higher returns overseas to beat what Japanese assets can offer despite that.
Mine is indeed a speculative view - but one has to choose what asset allocation one will have, and isn’t that in itself full of speculation? For example if one says that the current market cap shall be what one invests in with respect to equities, isn’t that implicitly speculating that status quo will prevail?
Not only is mine a speculative view. I am pretty bearish on Japan. But if my speculative view is totally wrong, the worst that will happen is my foreign assets decrease in value relatively, while my home and future salary income would increase (speculating that I do not get laid off or opt to quit.)