Japan's finance minister Katayama said on Friday she will seek to restore market
confidence by lowering the debt-to-GDP ratio and urged the Government Pension
Investment Fund (GPIF) and other pension funds to increase allocations to
domestic assets, saying we want the public to directly benefit from Japan's
economic growth. Market moves: the yen strengthened, USD/JPY hit an intraday low
of 161.28 (down 0.67%); Japan's Nikkei 225 rose as much as 2.4%; 10- and 20-year
JGB yields each fell about 10bps intraday. Institutional takes: Daiwa Securities
says Katayama's comments could trigger a simultaneous rebound in the yen,
equities and JGBs, noting GPIF's potential reallocation is market-significant
after her explicit mention of GPIF portfolio management. Lanze Securities notes
GPIF—managing roughly ¥300 tln—moving into Japanese financial assets would be
bullish for domestic equities and could prompt follow-through from overseas
investors. Crédit Agricole warns Katayama appears to prefer structural measures
over outright FX intervention; a durable yen reversal would likely require
concrete steps such as a more aggressive BoJ tightening, fiscal consolidation or
non-debt financing, and an actual GPIF allocation shift. Sumitomo Mitsui DS
Asset Management says reducing foreign-asset exposure would ease yen
depreciation, support bonds and lift stocks, but lack of detail risks a reversal
if actions fall short of market expectations. Robeco expects a net positive for
the yen and local assets and reduced selling pressure at the ultra-long end;
GPIF cutting foreign exposure would further bolster the 10y+ curve and flatten
the steepest segments. FX dealer Gaitame.com attributes the yen bounce to
position-covering by overseas investors after government policy guidance and
Katayama's GPIF comments, but warns the size of any GPIF move is unclear and
today’s gains may be front-run, leaving follow-through dependent on overseas
investor reaction.