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Predictions 2023: Super Strong Yen, New Prime Minister, and Other Scenarios

Peter Tasker’s Year of the Rabbit predictions for the world of sports, politics, economics, and finance ー Happy New Year!

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2022 was a year when, predictions aside, jarring shocks started to seem normal. It began with Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which marked the first outright land war in Europe since 1945. 

In the middle of the year, the world was shocked by the assassination of Shinzo Abe. He was the most consequential Japanese political leader for half a century. 

Meanwhile, COVID refused to disappear. However, most governments seem to have abandoned the previous draconian social mobility restrictions as being more damaging than the disease itself.

The quadrennial Football World Cup usually makes for a bright interlude in the succession of crises and disasters that make up the daily news. The 2022 World Cup was less pleasurable than it should have been, despite the high standard of football on display. For a start, it took place in November / December instead of the standard July / August, when the baking heat of Qatar would have endangered the health of players and spectators. 

So why stage the tournament in such an inappropriate place? And what is to become of that huge stadium that so many imported workers died hurrying to build?

United Nations Security Council votes on a resolution to end the Russian invasion of the Ukraine but fails to pass it. Friday February 25, 2022. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Winners and Losers

FIFA, the governing body of international football, is a paradigm of dysfunctional, secretive, but always richly financed organizations that exist beyond the reach of democratic accountability. Another example is the International Olympic Committee — the Japanese police are still investigating corruption related to the Tokyo Olympics

Also among them is the United Nations, which once again proved its structural uselessness in its response to the Ukraine War. 

Nonetheless, there was one unexpected side-effect of the Qatar World Cup that could prove extremely important in geopolitical terms. The Chinese public watching the football saw that spectators at the stadium were not wearing masks to protect against COVID. In other words, the pandemic was no longer considered a serious threat in most of the world. 

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Their government's claim that its "zero-COVID" policy was the best course of action was no longer credible. The result was a short, sharp burst of social unrest. Insofar as we can tell, Beijing dealt with it in an unusually lenient manner. For the first time, Xi Jinping appears to have backed down.

Scorecard for 2022 Predictions: Wins

In 2022, our predictions were for a treble-digit oil price, double-digit inflation, a Taiwan emergency, takeovers of large Japanese companies by American money, and a "return to reality" from the virtual "working from home" lifestyle that took off during the pandemic. The outcome was three wins and two losses, which we consider a narrow victory. 

Inflation did reach double digits in 2022. And the price of a barrel of Brent crude was higher than $100 USD for most of the year. Oil is likely to remain at elevated levels into the medium term as supply has been limited by a decade of underinvestment, and renewables are still a minor part of the energy mix in many countries. Meanwhile, demand is visibly weakening as the central banks led by the United States Federal Reserve have overtightened and brought about a global recession.

Likewise, consumer price inflation topped 10% in many European countries, including Germany, Sweden, Belgium, and the United Kingdom. 

Financial markets are expecting inflation to decline rapidly from 2023. It is quite likely given the sharp decline in liquidity in the United States and elsewhere. But we now live in a world where inflation is always a real threat, as opposed to the complacent pre-COVID era, when many intelligent people convinced themselves that inflation was impossible. No doubt, there will be other waves when governments shift their priorities and start to worry about weak growth.

Meanwhile, non-virtual life seems to be back in fashion, judging from the surge in tourism and collapse in the stock prices of "stay at home" companies like Meta (Facebook), Zoom, and Netflix.

A soldier looks through binoculars during a Chinese People's Liberation Army exercise in the waters surrounding Taiwan on August 5, 2022 (© Xinhua via Kyodo).

Scorecard for 2022 Predictions: Losses (For Now)

The other two predictions — the Taiwan emergency and the boom in acquisitions — turned out to be wide off the mark. 

The Ukraine war has served as a wake-up call for many countries, not least Japan, but also, in a different sense, China. Precisely because the world is now sensitized to the cataclysmic risks of a Chinese move on Taiwan, it is significantly less likely to happen. 

The Ukraine war has acted as a showcase for the new generation of American weaponry. But, more importantly, it has demonstrated the damage that a comprehensive sanctions regime can do. 

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In his best seller Chip War, Chris Miller notes that China's semiconductor imports are larger than Saudi Arabia's oil exports. America's destruction of Huawei as a global player is a tiny taste of what to expect in the case of an assault on Taiwan. Everyone would be hurt badly, but China would be hurt the most. 

The potential for large-scale acquisitions of Japanese companies by American capital still stands, despite the collapse in the stock prices of Tesla, Meta, and others. Thanks to the strength of the dollar, the relative scale of Japanese and American stock market capitalization has hardly changed since this time in 2022. 

Over the last 10 years, the US market cap has risen from 48% to 63% of the global total, against a share of the global GDP of just 25%. At some point, this imbalance has to be rectified. Perhaps the Year of the Rabbit will be the turning point, with a reversal in the dollar-yen rate being a key driver.

Scenarios for the Year of the Rabbit

Scenario 1: The Super-Strong Yen

This time two years ago, the yen-dollar touched 102. In September of 2022, it briefly topped 150. Such a rapid slump is usually the result of an economic crisis. But there was no economic crisis in Japan. Rather, it was the unprecedentedly sharp rise in US interest rates that touched off a financial market riot. 

Normally, you would expect the currency of the country with the lowest inflation to be the strongest, and the one with the highest inflation to be the weakest. That is not what happened this time. The result: a yen that was much too cheap on fundamentals, meaning purchasing power.

In 2023, the US Federal Reserve will face a much weaker economy and will be forced to abandon its tight monetary policy. Meanwhile, the new governor of the Bank of Japan will gradually allow interest rates to rise toward the natural level, which is just north of 1%. The combination of these two factors will drive the yen much higher.

Complaints about the strong yen's effect on the profits of exporters and fears of a return to deflation will replace complaints by CEOs and media people about the currency's effect on inflation.

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida stands with members of his second cabinet on August 10. (photo by Yasuhiro Yajima)

Scenario 2: Change at the Top in Japan

Over the last 40 years, there have been 21 Japanese prime ministers. That means the average term in office has been just under two years. However, during that time there have been three prime ministers — Yasuhiro Nakasone, Junichiro Koizumi, and Shinzo Abe — who had quite lengthy stints in office. Not coincidentally, all three devised their own policy agendas and made significant impacts internationally. 

Excluding these exceptional leaders, the average term in office for "ordinary" prime ministers has been one year and nine months.

In other words, statistically speaking, it is more than likely there will be a change of prime minister in 2023. It would make things more interesting if the next Japanese leader were a determined and outspoken woman.

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Scenario 3: China Pivots to Pragmatism

In the last few years, the Chinese government has taken down tech tycoons who it felt were getting too powerful, directed bellicose rhetoric and deeds toward other countries, and imposed draconian social control in the name of "zero-COVID." 

The change in that last policy has been startling. Not a gradual easing, but a sudden full-scale reversal. Beijing is keen to stress that the new approach had been long planned — and not a response to social unrest. But it seems that officials charged with implementing the COVID policy had no idea what was coming. The protests, starting with the mass walkouts at Foxconn's enormous factories and ending with the "white paper" street demos, were crucial factors.

A Tilt from Control to Growth?

Here are some comments from Wang Zhi'an, formerly of state broadcaster China Central Television. He is now an independent journalist reporting from Japan. 

The outrage and anger of ordinary people, mobilized during all these protests, show that the extent of grievances is unparalleled. In the end, the Party conceded. This is quite rare.

In the ruling history of the Communist Party, there are extremely few occasions where they finally made concessions in the face of mass protest…. [the] COVID measures in the past were indeed unpopular, and even many people within the government did not agree. In fact, some within the system were likely privately supportive of these young people taking to the streets to protest, leading to a change in policy.

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Could this mark the start of a tilt from social control to growth? It would make sense since economic stagnation and loss of entrepreneurial dynamism are in nobody's interest, including the leadership. 

The proof will be in the performance of the Chinese stock market, which has performed awfully for several years now.

Scenario 4: ESG Backlash

The growth of ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) funds has been one of the most striking phenomena in the financial world over the last decade. Assets under the management of ESG funds have risen from $15 trillion USD in 2014 to $38 trillion USD today. Bloomberg Intelligence expects further growth to $53 trillion USD by 2025. This would put them at one-third of the entire funds total. 

The idea is to do well by doing good, as Benjamin Franklin advised. What's not to like?

The Problems

Three problems have cropped up. The first is that ESG funds did well during the bull market of 2015 to 2021, which was led by giant tech companies. These companies produce negligible emissions directly but find life harder when commodities and old economy stocks are booming. How much profit are investors willing to sacrifice for virtue? Only now is the question coming up.

The second issue is the difficulty in ranking stocks for ESG. Specialist rating companies come up with drastically different scores for the same stocks. In 2022, several European funds were found to have been guilty of "greenwashing" by the financial regulator. In one case, German police mounted a raid on the asset management arm of a flagship bank. Campbell's Law: any metric used for decision-making will be gamed.

The third problem is potentially the most serious. Although ESG is presented as a neutral technocratic procedure, it is highly political. It is essentially a way of engineering significant social and economic change without the inconvenience of going through the legislature. As such, it is certain to meet political opposition. 

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This is already happening in the US, where officials from 19 states have criticized what is being called "woke investing." Florida Governor Ron de Santis has pulled several billion out of ESG funds.

2022 was the first year ever in which ESG funds suffered net outflows. It won't be the last.

Scenario 5: Roubini Disappointed

Nouriel Roubini, professor emeritus at New York University, published a book called Mega Threats: Ten Dangerous Trends That Imperil Our Future. Adam Tooze, who teaches history at Columbia University, is equally pessimistic. He declared that we are in the midst of a "polycrisis," meaning a number of disparate crises that interact and create one gigantic mess.

It's enough to make your flesh creep, but there is another set of possibilities. That there is a kind of feedback loop, in which acknowledgment of the risks leads to steps being taken to avoid them. So China prioritizes its economic problems. Concern about a wider war leads to a ceasefire in Ukraine. Worried about a deepening global recession, central banks "pivot" to growth, taking stock prices higher.

A more optimistic thinker is Steven Pinker, professor of psychology at Harvard University. He notes that the news is nearly always bad news. We pay close attention to natural disasters and horrible crimes, but ignore slow, steady improvements in well-being and pleasant weather. It seems to be human nature.

2022 was definitely a "Roubini year," but 2023 is more likely to be a "Pinker year," one in which there is plenty to worry about and no doubt several new scares. But, in the end, nothing unusually terrible happens.

Three Cherry Blossoms - Brave Blossom's badge

Predictions: Japan the Giant-killer

Finally, an extra prediction in the field of sport. Samurai Blue, the Japanese football team, excelled themselves in the Qatar World Cup. They emerged from the group stage with victories against two European giants, Germany and Spain. The team narrowly lost on penalties to Croatia, who ended up as the third-placed team in the tournament.

In 2023, it is the turn of the Brave Blossoms, Japan's rugby team. They are in a tough group, containing England, Argentina, and Samoa, as well as the lower-ranked Chile. If they play to their full potential, they can rival the giant-killing exploits of the Japanese footballers.

Scenario Six: Japan to reach the quarterfinals of the Rugby World Cup.

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Author: Peter Tasker

Find essays by the author on JAPAN Forward at this link.