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In focus: The case for Japanese equities

Japanese equities have been extending their rally, handily outperforming the global markets since the turn of the year. In the year to date as of February 29, 2024, the Nikkei 225 Index has risen 17%, breaching the all-time high recorded 34 years ago. A broader benchmark, TOPIX, similarly surged 13% over the same period, almost touching its all-time high. In comparison, the US benchmark S&P 500 Index rose almost 7% year-to-date, while the global benchmark MSCI All Country World Index rose almost 5%.1

For Templeton Global Equity Group, Japan remains a high-conviction market in 2024 as we believe corporate governance reforms continue to underpin prospects of enhanced shareholder returns; a normalizing domestic economy after three decades of deflation may prove supportive as well. However, valuations and earnings growth bear watching.

Investment outlook

In the United States, optimism about rate cuts currently dominates sentiment, but we will pay attention to capital costs and their impact on corporate fundamentals, including earnings and cash flow growth. Likewise, amid the market recovery in the Asia Pacific (APAC) region, we strive to gear our portfolios toward companies that are favorably valued relative to their future earnings power, while diversification remains a key investment priority. In Europe, we like the small- and mid-cap segment following a period of underperformance relative to the big caps. The United Kingdom is one of the markets where we see relevant opportunities.

Looking ahead, we aim to keep our portfolios generally balanced across a range of factor and style exposures, as we continue to navigate a stock-picker’s market. As always, valuation discipline and bottom-up fundamental analysis will anchor our investment decisions, but we will adopt a nuanced approach to different regions to identify their most attractive opportunities, in our view.

Market review: February 2024

Global equities rallied in February 2024. As measured by MSCI indexes in US-dollar terms, emerging market equities modestly outperformed a global index, while developed market equities slightly lagged it, and frontier market equities significantly underperformed it. Global growth stocks substantially outperformed global value stocks.

In February, generally strong fourth-quarter 2023 corporate earnings reports, enthusiasm about artificial intelligence and the potential for an economic soft landing in certain regions bolstered investor sentiment. However, expectations about interest-rate cuts in the United States and Europe diminished amid hawkish comments from the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank.



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