2021年5月30日日曜日

Outlook for the Nikkei average this week [30-May-2021]

 [Present state recognition of fundamental]

Last week in the U.S., stock indices rose on the back of a rebound in the virtual currency Bitcoin and expectations that the new coronavirus vaccine will help normalize economic activity. On the other hand, in the medium to long term, there are concerns about inflation due to side effects of excess liquidity, and concerns about lack of creditworthiness of banks and credit crunch due to defaults by funds and other institutions. There are also concerns about the collapse of China's real estate bubble and economic slowdown, as well as concerns about a global economic slowdown due to trade wars and other factors. Furthermore, geopolitical risks in East Asia, the Middle East, and Ukraine continue to require attention.

 

The difference in the yield spread between the Japanese and U.S. markets is that the Japanese market is 2.53 points cheaper than the U.S. market, considering the announced OECD nominal GDP forecast for 2021. The reason for the undervaluation is the difference between the S&P 500's PER of 22.6 and the Nikkei 225's expected PER of 14.1 for the current fiscal year, as well as the difference in interest rates and GDP growth between the U.S. and Japan.

This means that if the GDP growth rate difference between Japan and the U.S. in 2021 expands by another 2.53 percentage points compared to the OECD forecast (Japan is revised downward or the U.S. is revised upward), or if the PER of the Nikkei 225 stocks for the current fiscal year is about 22.0, or if the Nikkei 225 is about 45360 yen compared to the current price of the Nikkei 225. The Japanese market is undervalued by about 16210 yen in the medium to long term.

 

[Conditions for Nikkei average rise]

In the future, the following assumptions are necessary for the Nikkei average to rise further.

Rising US market

UP of expected profit increase rate for the current term more than before

Expansion of the interest rate differential between Japan and the US and further depreciation of the yen

Upward revision of Japan's 2021 GDP estimate (now +2.72%) by OECD

Foreign investors over-buying

 

Looking at recent movements

    Last week's NYDow weekly trend was positive. The daily footstep is above the 200-day line and the clouds of the Ichimoku kinko table. NASDAQ weekly trend was positive. The daily footstep is above the 200-day line and in the clouds of the Ichimoku kinko table. It will be interesting to see if NYDow can keep above the 25-day line.

    As a result of the announcement of the quarterly financial results, the expected ROE of the Nikkei 225 stocks was 8.8%, an improvement of 3.0 points from three months ago. In addition, the profit growth rate was +27,4%, an improvement of 21.7% points from three months ago.

    Although long-term interest rates in the U.S. declined and the interest rate gap between Japan and the U.S. narrowed from 1.55 to 1.52, the yen weakened in the range of 108 yen to 110 yen.

    The OECD's nominal GDP growth forecast for Japan and the U.S. for 2021 has been revised, and Japan is expected to be +2.72% and the U.S. +4.35%, so the Japanese market is 1.63 percentage points inferior in this aspect.

    The third week of May was oversold, the fourth week of May was likely overbought, and this week is expected to be overbought. Last week, of the five points, and were bullish. This week, ①②③⑤ are expected to have an impact.

 

[Technical viewpoint]

Looking at the Japanese market from a technical perspective, it is overvalued by 0.8 points (about 230 yen in terms of the Nikkei 225) over the medium to long term in terms of the 200-day deviation from the NASDAQ. On the other hand, it is undervalued by 3.1 points (about 900 yen in terms of the Nikkei 225) of the 200-day divergence from NYDow.

 

The Nikkei 225 is under the clouds in the Ichimoku Kinko table. The total deviation rate was +10.8%, which has expanded positive width compared to last week. The 200-day moving average deviation rate was +9.4 which has expanded positive width. As the two factors are positive, the "yellow light" is lit in the medium term trend.

The Nikkei 225 is above the 25 day line and the 9 day line. The "green light" is lit in short-term trends.

 

In the US market, NY Dow is above the 200 day line and the 25 day line and the 9 day line. It is above the clouds in the Ichimoku Kinko table. Nasdaq is above the 200 day line and the 25 day line and above the 9 day line. It is above clouds of the Ichimoku Kinko table.

In the short term, the "green light" is lit, and in the medium term, the "green light" is lit.

 

[Outlook for this week]

Looking at the U.S. market from a fundamental perspective, concerns about the U.S. interest rate hike, the U.S.-China trade friction, and the North Korea issue have receded, but risk factors include the upward trend in long-term interest rates, rising oil prices, falling high yield bond markets, financial market turmoil due to the credit crunch, lack of creditworthiness of banks in the EU and the political situation, concerns about a global economic slowdown due to trade wars, and geopolitical risks in the Middle East and East Asia.

 

The latest LIBOR rates are calm and there is no sign of financial instability. In March 2020, the LIBOR rate rose despite a decline in short-term interest rates, raising awareness of the possibility of renewed financial instability.

 

On the other hand, favorable factors include the zero interest rate policy in the U.S. and the Fed's direct financial support to corporations including junk bond purchases and $2 trillion in economic stimulus. In addition to the Bank of Japan's monetary easing measures, such as setting a 2% inflation target, introducing negative interest rates and unlimited purchases of JGBs and ETFs ranging from 0 to 12 trillion yen, the Japanese government's economic measures exceeding those taken during the Lehman Shock, the EU's establishment of a 92 trillion yen Corona Recovery Fund, and the ECB's announcement of deepening negative interest rates and expanding quantitative easing.

 

Looking at the technical aspect, the US market is upward trend in the medium term and upward trend in the short term. The Japanese market is no trend in the medium term and upward trend in the short term.

 

Analysis of the currency markets shows that the yen was moving gently higher in 2020, but has rapidly weakened since the start of 2021, but has been struggling for the past 6 weeks. However, it has been struggling for the past seven weeks. We expect the yen to be in the ¥109 to ¥110 range this week.

 

It will be a busy week, with the US jobs report and worldwide manufacturing and services PMIs providing an update on the economic recovery as well as supply constraints and price pressures. Other important releases include GDP figures for India, Brazil, Australia and Canada, monetary policy decisions from the RBA and the RBI, and inflation for the Euro Area. US stock markets will be closed on Monday for the Memorial Day holiday.

 

Last week, the Nikkei 225 moved almost in line with the expected range. The upside was about 20 yen above the assumed line and the downside was about 50 yen above the assumed line. The expected range of the Nikkei 225 this week is between the Bollinger Band +2σ (currently around 29690 yen) on the upside and the 25-day line (currently around 28650 yen) on the downside.

2021年5月23日日曜日

Outlook for the Nikkei average this week [23-May-2021]

 [Present state recognition of fundamental]

Last week, the U.S. market was affected by the volatility of the virtual currency Bitcoin, and stock indices showed mixed movements. On the other hand, in the medium to long term, there are concerns about inflation due to side effects of excess liquidity, and concerns about lack of creditworthiness of banks and credit crunch due to defaults by funds and other institutions. There are also concerns about the collapse of China's real estate bubble and economic slowdown, as well as concerns about a global economic slowdown due to trade wars and other factors. Furthermore, geopolitical risks in East Asia, the Middle East, and Ukraine continue to require attention.

 

The difference in the yield spread between the Japanese and U.S. markets is that the Japanese market is 2.59 points cheaper than the U.S. market, considering the announced OECD nominal GDP forecast for 2021. The reason for the undervaluation is the difference between the S&P 500's PER of 22.4 and the Nikkei 225's expected PER of 14.0 for the current fiscal year, as well as the difference in interest rates and GDP growth between the U.S. and Japan.

This means that if the GDP growth rate difference between Japan and the U.S. in 2021 expands by another 2.28 percentage points compared to the OECD forecast (Japan is revised downward or the U.S. is revised upward), or if the PER of the Nikkei 225 stocks for the current fiscal year is about 22.0, or if the Nikkei 225 is about 44,460 yen compared to the current price of the Nikkei 225. The Japanese market is undervalued by about 16140 yen in the medium to long term.

 

[Conditions for Nikkei average rise]

In the future, the following assumptions are necessary for the Nikkei average to rise further.

Rising US market

UP of expected profit increase rate for the current term more than before

Expansion of the interest rate differential between Japan and the US and further depreciation of the yen

Upward revision of Japan's 2021 GDP estimate (now +2.72%) by OECD

Foreign investors over-buying

 

Looking at recent movements

    Last week's NYDow weekly trend was negative. The daily footstep is above the 200-day line and the clouds of the Ichimoku kinko table. NASDAQ weekly trend was positive. The daily footstep is above the 200-day line and in the clouds of the Ichimoku kinko table. It will be interesting to see if NYDow can keep above the 25-day line.

    As a result of the announcement of the quarterly financial results, the expected ROE of the Nikkei 225 stocks was 8.8%, an improvement of 2.8 points from three months ago. In addition, the profit growth rate was +26.9%, an improvement of 21.7% points from three months ago.

    Although long-term interest rates in the U.S. declined, the interest rate difference between Japan and the U.S. remained unchanged at 1.55 to 1.55, and the exchange rate moved in the direction of yen appreciation from the 109 yen level to the 108 yen level.

    The OECD's nominal GDP growth forecast for Japan and the U.S. for 2021 has been revised, and Japan is expected to be +2.72% and the U.S. +4.35%, so the Japanese market is 1.63 percentage points inferior in this aspect.

    The second week of May was oversold, the third week of May was likely oversold, and this week is expected to be overbought. Last week, of the five points, was bullish. This week, ①②③⑤ are expected to have an impact.

 

[Technical viewpoint]

Looking at the Japanese market from a technical standpoint, the 200-day divergence from the NASDAQ is 0.0 points (about 0 yen in terms of the Nikkei 225) over the medium to long term, and the market is in balance. On the other hand, it is undervalued by 5.1 points (about 1,440 yen in terms of the Nikkei 225) over the medium to long term in terms of the 200-day divergence from NYDow.

 

The Nikkei 225 is under the clouds in the Ichimoku Kinko table. The total deviation rate was +1.9%, which has changed positive width compared to last week. The 200-day moving average deviation rate was +6.9 which has expanded positive width. As the two factors are positive, the "yellow light" is lit in the medium term trend.

The Nikkei 225 is under the 25 day line but above the 9 day line. The "yellow light" is lit in short-term trends.

 

In the US market, NY Dow is above the 200 day line and the 25 day line and the 9 day line. It is above the clouds in the Ichimoku Kinko table. Nasdaq is above the 200 day line but under the 25 day line and above the 9 day line. It is in the clouds of the Ichimoku Kinko table.

In the short term, the "yellow light" is lit, and in the medium term, the "yellow light" is lit.

 

[Outlook for this week]

Looking at the U.S. market from a fundamental perspective, concerns about the U.S. interest rate hike, the U.S.-China trade friction, and the North Korea issue have receded, but risk factors include the upward trend in long-term interest rates, rising oil prices, falling high yield bond markets, financial market turmoil due to the credit crunch, lack of creditworthiness of banks in the EU and the political situation, concerns about a global economic slowdown due to trade wars, and geopolitical risks in the Middle East and East Asia.

 

The latest LIBOR rates are calm and there is no sign of financial instability. In March 2020, the LIBOR rate rose despite a decline in short-term interest rates, raising awareness of the possibility of renewed financial instability.

 

On the other hand, favorable factors include the zero interest rate policy in the U.S. and the Fed's direct financial support to corporations including junk bond purchases and $2 trillion in economic stimulus. In addition to the Bank of Japan's monetary easing measures, such as setting a 2% inflation target, introducing negative interest rates and unlimited purchases of JGBs and ETFs ranging from 0 to 12 trillion yen, the Japanese government's economic measures exceeding those taken during the Lehman Shock, the EU's establishment of a 92 trillion yen Corona Recovery Fund, and the ECB's announcement of deepening negative interest rates and expanding quantitative easing.

 

Looking at the technical aspect, the US market is no trend in the medium term and no trend in the short term. The Japanese market is no trend in the medium term and no trend in the short term.

 

Analysis of the currency markets shows that the yen was moving gently higher in 2020, but has rapidly weakened since the start of 2021, but has been struggling for the past 6 weeks. However, it has been struggling for the past five weeks. We expect the yen to be in the ¥108 to ¥109 range this week.

 

This week in the U.S., in addition to the revised first quarter GDP, durable goods orders, personal income and spending, and PCE price index will be released, and President Biden's proposed budget for 2022 will also be in focus. In addition, the central banks of South Korea, Indonesia, and New Zealand will make monetary policy decisions, and GDP releases are scheduled for Germany and France. The Eurozone Business Confidence Survey, China's industrial profits, and Japan's unemployment rate will also be closely watched.

 

Last week, the Nikkei 225 temporarily fell below the assumed range. The upper price was about 1,100 yen below the assumed line and the lower price was about 170 yen below the assumed line. The expected range of the Nikkei 225 for this week is between the Bollinger Band +1σ (currently around 29510 yen) on the upside and the Bollinger Band -1σ (currently around 28200 yen) on the downside.

2021年5月16日日曜日

Outlook for the Nikkei average this week [16-May-2021]

 [Present state recognition of fundamental]

In the U.S. market last week, stock indices declined due to warnings of accelerating inflation and higher interest rates ahead due to economic recovery. On the other hand, in the medium to long term, there are concerns about inflation due to side effects of excess liquidity, and concerns about lack of creditworthiness of banks and credit crunch due to defaults by funds and other institutions. There are also concerns about the collapse of China's real estate bubble and economic slowdown, as well as concerns about a global economic slowdown due to trade wars and other factors. Furthermore, geopolitical risks in East Asia, the Middle East, and Ukraine continue to require attention.

 

The difference in the yield spread between the Japanese and U.S. markets is that the Japanese market is 2.28 points cheaper than the U.S. market, considering the announced OECD nominal GDP forecast for 2021. The reason for the undervaluation is the difference between the S&P 500's PER of 22.6 and the Nikkei 225's expected PER of 14.7 for the current fiscal year, as well as the difference in interest rates and GDP growth between the U.S. and Japan.

This means that if the GDP growth rate difference between Japan and the U.S. in 2021 expands by another 2.28 percentage points compared to the OECD forecast (Japan is revised downward or the U.S. is revised upward), or if the PER of the Nikkei 225 stocks for the current fiscal year is about 22.2, or if the Nikkei 225 is about 42,290 yen compared to the current price of the Nikkei 225. The Japanese market is undervalued by about 14200 yen in the medium to long term.

 

[Conditions for Nikkei average rise]

In the future, the following assumptions are necessary for the Nikkei average to rise further.

Rising US market

UP of expected profit increase rate for the current term more than before

Expansion of the interest rate differential between Japan and the US and further depreciation of the yen

Upward revision of Japan's 2021 GDP estimate (now +2.72%) by OECD

Foreign investors over-buying

 

Looking at recent movements

    Last week's NYDow weekly trend was negative. The daily footstep is above the 200-day line and the clouds of the Ichimoku kinko table. NASDAQ weekly trend was negative. The daily footstep is above the 200-day line and above the clouds of the Ichimoku kinko table. It will be interesting to see if NYDow can keep above the 25-day line.

    As a result of the announcement of the quarterly financial results, the expected ROE of the Nikkei 225 stocks was 8.4%, an improvement of 3.0 points from three months ago. In addition, the profit growth rate was +22.9%, an improvement of 31.9% points from three months ago.

    Long-term interest rates in the U.S. rose, widening the interest rate gap between Japan and the U.S. from 1.50 to 1.55, and the yen moved in the direction of depreciation from the 108-yen to 109-yen range.

    The OECD's nominal GDP growth forecast for Japan and the U.S. for 2021 has been revised, and Japan is expected to be +2.72% and the U.S. +4.35%, so the Japanese market is 1.63 percentage points inferior in this aspect.

    The first week of May was overbought, the second week of May was likely oversold, and this week is expected to be overbought. Last week, of the five points, was bearish. This week, ①②③⑤ are expected to have an impact.

 

[Technical viewpoint]

Looking at the Japanese market from a technical perspective, it is undervalued by 0.6 points (about 170 yen in terms of the Nikkei 225) over the medium to long term in terms of the 200-day divergence from the NASDAQ. It is now undervalued. On the other hand, the stock is undervalued by 6.7 points (about 1,880 yen in terms of the Nikkei 225) over the medium to long term in terms of the 200-day divergence from NYDow.

 

The Nikkei 225 is under the clouds in the Ichimoku Kinko table. The total deviation rate was -1.1%, which has changed negative width compared to last week. The 200-day moving average deviation rate was +6.5 which has shrank positive width. As the two factors are negative, the "yellow light" is lit in the medium term trend.

The Nikkei 225 is under the 25 day line and 9 day line. The "red light" is lit in short-term trends.

 

In the US market, NY Dow is above the 200 day line and the 25 day line and the 9 day line. It is above the clouds in the Ichimoku Kinko table. Nasdaq is above the 200 day line but under the 25 day line and the 9 day line. It is above the clouds of the Ichimoku Kinko table.

In the short term, the "yellow light" is lit, and in the medium term, the "green light" is lit.

 

[Outlook for this week]

Looking at the U.S. market from a fundamental perspective, concerns about the U.S. interest rate hike, the U.S.-China trade friction, and the North Korea issue have receded, but risk factors include the upward trend in long-term interest rates, rising oil prices, falling high yield bond markets, financial market turmoil due to the credit crunch, lack of creditworthiness of banks in the EU and the political situation, concerns about a global economic slowdown due to trade wars, and geopolitical risks in the Middle East and East Asia.

 

The latest LIBOR rates are calm and there is no sign of financial instability. In March 2020, the LIBOR rate rose despite a decline in short-term interest rates, raising awareness of the possibility of renewed financial instability.

 

On the other hand, favorable factors include the zero interest rate policy in the U.S. and the Fed's direct financial support to corporations including junk bond purchases and $2 trillion in economic stimulus. In addition to the Bank of Japan's monetary easing measures, such as setting a 2% inflation target, introducing negative interest rates and unlimited purchases of JGBs and ETFs ranging from 0 to 12 trillion yen, the Japanese government's economic measures exceeding those taken during the Lehman Shock, the EU's establishment of a 92 trillion yen Corona Recovery Fund, and the ECB's announcement of deepening negative interest rates and expanding quantitative easing.

 

Looking at the technical aspect, the US market is upward trend in the medium term and no trend in the short term. The Japanese market is no trend in the medium term and downward trend in the short term.

 

Analysis of the currency markets shows that the yen was moving gently higher in 2020, but has rapidly weakened since the start of 2021, but has been struggling for the past five weeks. However, it has been struggling for the past five weeks. We expect the yen to be in the ¥108 to ¥109 range this week.

 

This week, the Fed and RBA will release the minutes of their policy meetings, and China's central bank will hold its interest rate meeting. On the economic data front, preliminary PMI readings from the US, UK, Eurozone, Japan and Australia will tell us about the state of the global economy. Other important releases include housing starts in the US, inflation data and retail sales in the UK, Q1 GDP updates in Japan and the Eurozone, and industrial production in China.

 

Last week's Nikkei 225 was well below the expected range. The upper price was about 440 yen below the assumed line and the lower price was about 1,860 yen below the assumed line. The expected range for the Nikkei 225 this week is between the Bollinger Band +1σ (currently around JPY 29770) on the upside and the Bollinger Band -2σ (currently around JPY 27970) on the downside.

2021年5月9日日曜日

Outlook for the Nikkei average this week [09-May-2021]

 [Present state recognition of fundamental]

In the U.S. market last week, economic sensitivities rose on the back of rising commodity prices, but tech stocks fell and stock indices were mixed. On the other hand, in the medium to long term, there are concerns about inflation due to side effects of excess liquidity, and concerns about lack of creditworthiness of banks and credit crunch due to defaults by funds and other institutions. There are also concerns about the collapse of China's real estate bubble and economic slowdown, as well as concerns about a global economic slowdown due to trade wars and other factors. Furthermore, geopolitical risks in East Asia, the Middle East, and Ukraine continue to require attention.

 

The difference in the yield spread between the Japanese and U.S. markets is that the Japanese market is 0.69 points cheaper than the U.S. market, considering the announced OECD nominal GDP forecast for 2021. The reason for the undervaluation is the difference between the S&P 500's PER of 23.0 and the Nikkei 225's expected PER of 19.3 for the current fiscal year, as well as the difference in interest rates and GDP growth between the U.S. and Japan.

This means that if the GDP growth rate difference between Japan and the U.S. in 2021 expands by another 0.69 percentage points compared to the OECD forecast (Japan is revised downward or the U.S. is revised upward), or if the PER of the Nikkei 225 stocks for the current fiscal year is about 22.3, or if the Nikkei 225 is about 33,900 yen compared to the current price of the Nikkei 225. The Japanese market is undervalued by about 4,540 yen in the medium to long term.

 

[Conditions for Nikkei average rise]

In the future, the following assumptions are necessary for the Nikkei average to rise further.

Rising US market

UP of expected profit increase rate for the current term more than before

Expansion of the interest rate differential between Japan and the US and further depreciation of the yen

Upward revision of Japan's 2021 GDP estimate (now +2.72%) by OECD

Foreign investors over-buying

 

Looking at recent movements

    Last week's NYDow weekly trend was positive. The daily footstep is above the 200-day line and the clouds of the Ichimoku kinko table. NASDAQ weekly trend was negative. The daily footstep is above the 200-day line and above the clouds of the Ichimoku kinko table. It will be interesting to see if NYDow can keep above the 25-day line.

    As a result of the announcement of the quarterly financial results, the expected ROE of the Nikkei 225 stocks was 6.7%, an improvement of 1.8 points from three months ago. In addition, the profit growth rate was +33.7%, an improvement of 52.1% points from three months ago.

    Long-term interest rates in the U.S. declined, and the interest rate gap between Japan and the U.S. narrowed from 1.55 to 1.50, and the yen moved higher in the range of 109 yen to 108 yen.

    The OECD's nominal GDP growth forecast for Japan and the U.S. for 2021 has been revised, and Japan is expected to be +2.72% and the U.S. +4.35%, so the Japanese market is 1.63 percentage points inferior in this aspect.

    The fourth week of April was oversold, the first week of May was likely oversold, and this week is expected to be overbought. Last week, of the five points, was bullish. This week, ①②③⑤ are expected to have an impact.

 

[Technical viewpoint]

Looking at the Japanese market from a technical perspective, it is overvalued by 1.8 points (about 530 yen in terms of the Nikkei 225) over the medium to long term in terms of the 200-day divergence from the NASDAQ. This is a change from last week. On the other hand, the stock is undervalued by 3.2 points (about 940 yen in terms of the Nikkei 225) over the medium to long term in terms of the 200-day divergence from NYDow.

 

The Nikkei 225 is in the clouds in the Ichimoku Kinko table. The total deviation rate was +12.1%, which has expanded positive width compared to last week. The 200-day moving average deviation rate was +12.0 which has expanded positive width. As the two factors are positive, the "yellow light" is lit in the medium term trend.

The Nikkei 225 is under the 25 day line but above 9 day line. The "yellow light" is lit in short-term trends.

 

In the US market, NY Dow is above the 200 day line and the 25 day line and the 9 day line. It is above the clouds in the Ichimoku Kinko table. Nasdaq is above the 200 day line but under the 25 day line and the 9 day line. It is above the clouds of the Ichimoku Kinko table.

In the short term, the "yellow light" is lit, and in the medium term, the "green light" is lit.

 

[Outlook for this week]

Looking at the U.S. market from a fundamental perspective, concerns about the U.S. interest rate hike, the U.S.-China trade friction, and the North Korea issue have receded, but risk factors include the upward trend in long-term interest rates, rising oil prices, falling high yield bond markets, financial market turmoil due to the credit crunch, lack of creditworthiness of banks in the EU and the political situation, concerns about a global economic slowdown due to trade wars, and geopolitical risks in the Middle East and East Asia.

 

The latest LIBOR rates are calm and there is no sign of financial instability. In March 2020, the LIBOR rate rose despite a decline in short-term interest rates, raising awareness of the possibility of renewed financial instability.

 

On the other hand, favorable factors include the zero interest rate policy in the U.S. and the Fed's direct financial support to corporations including junk bond purchases and $2 trillion in economic stimulus. In addition to the Bank of Japan's monetary easing measures, such as setting a 2% inflation target, introducing negative interest rates and unlimited purchases of JGBs and ETFs ranging from 0 to 12 trillion yen, the Japanese government's economic measures exceeding those taken during the Lehman Shock, the EU's establishment of a 92 trillion yen Corona Recovery Fund, and the ECB's announcement of deepening negative interest rates and expanding quantitative easing.

 

Looking at the technical aspect, the US market is upward trend in the medium term and no trend in the short term. The Japanese market is no trend in the medium term and no trend in the short term.

 

Analysis of the currency market shows that the yen had been moving gently in the direction of appreciation for the past year. In the past two months, the yen had rapidly weakened, but in the past 5 weeks, the yen has moved higher. We expect the yen to be in the ¥108 to ¥109 range this week.

 

This week will also be noteworthy for the release of April inflation rates in the US and China, first quarter GDP in the UK, and industrial production in the US and Eurozone. Other important data include retail sales and consumer confidence in the U.S., the current account balance in Japan, and business confidence in Australia. The ECB is also scheduled to release the minutes of its monetary policy meeting.

 

The Nikkei 225 exceeded the expected range last week. The upside was about 40 yen above the assumed line and the downside was about 290 yen above the assumed line. The expected range for the Nikkei 225 this week is between the Bollinger Band +2σ (currently around 30140 yen) on the upside and the 25-day line (currently around 29410 yen) on the downside.

2021年5月2日日曜日

Outlook for the Nikkei average this week [02-May-2021]

 [Present state recognition of fundamental]

Last week, stock indices in the U.S. market fell due to warnings that the global economic recovery would be slowed by the spread of the new coronavirus in emerging countries and semiconductor shortages. On the other hand, in the medium to long term, there are concerns about inflation due to side effects of excess liquidity, and concerns about lack of creditworthiness of banks and credit crunch due to defaults by funds and other institutions. There are also concerns about the collapse of China's real estate bubble and economic slowdown, as well as concerns about a global economic slowdown due to trade wars and other factors. Furthermore, geopolitical risks in East Asia, the Middle East, and Ukraine continue to require attention.

 

The difference in the yield spread between the Japanese and U.S. markets is 0.33 points cheaper than the Japanese market, considering the announced OECD nominal GDP forecast for 2021. The reason for the undervaluation is the difference between the S&P 500's PER of 23.1 and the Nikkei 225's expected PER of 21.1 for the current fiscal year, as well as the difference in interest rates and GDP growth between the U.S. and Japan.

This means that if the difference in GDP growth rates between Japan and the U.S. in 2021 expands by another 0.33 points compared to the OECD forecast (Japan downwardly revised or the U.S. upwardly revised), or if the PER of the Nikkei 225 stocks for the current fiscal year is about 22.7, or if the Nikkei 225 is about 30970 yen compared to the current price of the Nikkei 225 This means that the Japanese market is about 2160 yen cheaper than the U.S. market in the mid-to-long term and is almost in equilibrium.

 

[Conditions for Nikkei average rise]

In the future, the following assumptions are necessary for the Nikkei average to rise further.

Rising US market

UP of expected profit increase rate for the current term more than before

Expansion of the interest rate differential between Japan and the US and further depreciation of the yen

Upward revision of Japan's 2021 GDP estimate (now +2.72%) by OECD

Foreign investors over-buying

 

Looking at recent movements

    Last week's NYDow weekly trend was negative. The daily footstep is above the 200-day line and the clouds of the Ichimoku kinko table. NASDAQ weekly trend was negative. The daily footstep is above the 200-day line and above the clouds of the Ichimoku kinko table. It will be interesting to see if NYDow can keep above the 25-day line.

    As a result of the announcement of the quarterly financial results, the expected ROE of the Nikkei 225 stocks was 6.2%, an improvement of 1.2 points from three months ago. In addition, the profit growth rate was +17.0%, an improvement of 36.1% points from three months ago.

    Long-term interest rates in the U.S. rose, widening the interest rate gap between Japan and the U.S. from 1.50% to 1.56%, and the yen moved in the direction of depreciation from the 107-yen to 109-yen range.

    The OECD's nominal GDP growth forecast for Japan and the U.S. for 2021 has been revised, and Japan is expected to be +2.72% and the U.S. +4.35%, so the Japanese market is 1.63 percentage points inferior in this aspect.

    The third week of April was oversold, the fourth week of April was likely oversold, and this week is expected to be oversold. Last week, of the five points, was bearish. This week, ①②③⑤ are expected to have an impact.

 

[Technical viewpoint]

Looking at the Japanese market from a technical perspective, it is undervalued by 2.4 points (about 690 yen in terms of the Nikkei 225) over the medium to long term in terms of the 200-day divergence from the NASDAQ. This is a change from last week. On the other hand, the stock is undervalued by 2.7 points (about 780 yen in terms of the Nikkei 225) over the medium to long term in terms of the 200-day divergence from NYDow.

 

The Nikkei 225 is under the clouds in the Ichimoku Kinko table. The total deviation rate was +6.7%, which has shrank positive width compared to last week. The 200-day moving average deviation rate was +10.2 which has shrank the positive width. As the two factors are positive, the "yellow light" is lit in the medium term trend.

The Nikkei 225 is under the 25th line and the 9th line. The "red light" is lit in short-term trends.

 

In the US market, NY Dow is above the 200 day line and the 25 day line but under the 9 day line. It is above the clouds in the Ichimoku Kinko table. Nasdaq is above the 200 day line and the 25 day line but under the 9 day line. It is above the clouds of the Ichimoku Kinko table.

In the short term, the "yellow light" is lit, and in the medium term, the "green light" is lit.

 

[Outlook for this week]

Looking at the U.S. market from a fundamental perspective, concerns about the U.S. interest rate hike, the U.S.-China trade friction, and the North Korea issue have receded, but risk factors include the upward trend in long-term interest rates, rising oil prices, falling high yield bond markets, financial market turmoil due to the credit crunch, lack of creditworthiness of banks in the EU and the political situation, concerns about a global economic slowdown due to trade wars, and geopolitical risks in the Middle East and East Asia.

 

The latest LIBOR rates are calm and there is no sign of financial instability. In March 2020, the LIBOR rate rose despite a decline in short-term interest rates, raising awareness of the possibility of renewed financial instability.

 

On the other hand, favorable factors include the zero interest rate policy in the U.S. and the Fed's direct financial support to corporations including junk bond purchases and $2 trillion in economic stimulus. In addition to the Bank of Japan's monetary easing measures, such as setting a 2% inflation target, introducing negative interest rates and unlimited purchases of JGBs and ETFs ranging from 0 to 12 trillion yen, the Japanese government's economic measures exceeding those taken during the Lehman Shock, the EU's establishment of a 92 trillion yen Corona Recovery Fund, and the ECB's announcement of deepening negative interest rates and expanding quantitative easing.

 

Looking at the technical aspect, the US market is upward trend in the medium term and no trend in the short term. The Japanese market is no trend in the medium term and downward trend in the short term.

 

Analysis of the currency market shows that the yen had been moving gently in the direction of appreciation for the past year. In the past two months, the yen had rapidly weakened, but in the past 3 weeks, the yen has moved higher. We expect the yen to be in the ¥108 to ¥109 range this week.

 

This week, all eyes will be on the U.S. jobs report to be released on Friday, which is expected to accelerate the recovery of the labor market. Elsewhere, the earnings season continues with local elections in the UK on Thursday and Pfizer and GM announcing their quarterly results. The global PMI survey will be closely watched, as well as the monetary policies of central banks in the UK, Australia, and Turkey. In addition, trade statistics for the U.S. and Canada, manufacturing statistics for the U.S., Brazil, France, and Germany, and GDP statistics for Hong Kong and Indonesia will be released.

 

Last week, the Nikkei 225 fell below the assumed range. The upper price was about 550 yen below the assumed line and the lower price was about 280 yen below the assumed line. The expected range for the Nikkei 225 this week is the 25-day line (currently around 29410 yen) on the upside and the Bollinger Band -2σ (currently around 28670 yen) on the downside.