"...his fanboy leftist econ modeling boys" ... I guess that would be me! Interesting how Abe tried. But then, in this lovely nation of Buddhists, his colleagues fucked everything up with that very non-Keynesian tax increase. Well, it didn't take long for them to recognize they weren't going at all in the right direction. So they have undone that now. They're having a hard time figuring it out.. You see, on a personal level, the Japanese are hard working, polite, and big-time savers. All the things we aren't. Could anyone really blame them for not understanding Keynes... They may need a better Translation of "General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money." I'd be happy to loan my poor, old, dog-eared copy, but I'm afraid it is in English. While we wait the two decades for the result, let the rest of us, to whom debt and profligacy come naturally, chill out. It is premature to start judging a result before the experiment has got fully underway. In any case, it isn't some hedge fund honcho, unless it's Soros!, who'll be capable of figuring it out. Let's come back in twenty years and see how they've done. If they persist, they will eventually get Keynes right. They are very bright!
Things are so good in Japan, the central bank has to keep buying stocks. Bank Of Japan Buying Power Runs Dry: "If They Don't Increase Now, It's Going To Be A Shock!" Since 2010, The Bank of Japan has 'openly' - no conspiracy theory here - been a buyer of Japanese stock ETFs. Their bravado increased as the years passed and Abe pressured them from their independence to 'show' that his policies were working to the point that in September 2014, The BoJ bought a record amount of Japanese stock ETFs taking its holdings to over 1.5% of the entire market cap, surpassing Nippon Life as the largest individual holder of Japanese stocks. Having stepped in a stunning 76% of days to ensure the market closed green, it appears, as Bloomberg reports, time (or money) is running out for Kuroda and the BoJ having spent 78 percent of its allotment as of Sept. 7. "They've only got a little bit left in their quota," notes one trader, "The BOJ had a big role in supporting the market," he implored, "if they don’t increase purchases now, it’s going to be a shock." As Bloomberg reports, On Sept. 8, as the stock market slumped, investors were surprised to find the Bank of Japan, normally a buyer of exchange-traded funds on the Tokyo bourse, absent. What happened? The central bank, which is authorized to purchase about 3 trillion yen ($25 billion) in equity ETFs a year, is running out of ammunition, having spent 78 percent of its total as of Sept. 7. Because the BOJ usually buys on days the market falls, it sped up amid a rout in the Topix index. Now it must slow down for the rest of 2015 or increase its allotment, according to Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities Co. “They’ve only got a little bit left in their quota,” said Seiji Arai, a strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities in Tokyo. “I think they’ll vow to increase yearly purchases by 1 or 2 trillion yen in October.” With just 670 billion yen to go until its limit, the central bank has shrunk the amount it buys each time by 15 percent from its first purchase of the year to 31.7 billion yen in September. It stuck to that amount with a purchase on Thursday. As the Topix recorded its worst monthly loss since 2012, the central bank purchased 302 billion yen in ETFs. Without that, the rout would have been much worse, according to Arai. As he concludes - so perfectly summing up the farce that so many call "markets"... “The BOJ had a big role in supporting the market,” he said. “If they don’t increase purchases now, it’s going to be a shock.”
Capitalism = Free Markets => Willing Buyer + Willing Seller = Agreed Fair Value. Central Banks are becoming like ISIS sex slaves.
Oh dear....that's the end of Japan. Dollar yen moved a full 5 pips in response...the end must be near...
Did someone say it's the end of Japan or did someone just show yet another example of how Abenomics is a disaster in the making? Oh wait, sorry. It was you who said it was the end of Japan.
Congratulations! I would have thought no one could have a worse understanding of U.S. macro economics and monetary policy than you. Nevertheless, you achieved the seemingly impossible. By demonstrating an even worse understanding of Japanese macro economics and monetary policy you have now surpassed even yourself.