Thursday, December 01, 2005

Nikkei breaks 15,000

The Nikkei finished up 258.35 points at 15,130.50, its highest close since Dec. 13, 2000. Yesterday ir briefly rose to 15,013.24, climbing above 15,000 for the first time since Dec. 14, 2000.

I ran across the most interesting graph of the Nikkei (see page 1). It overlays the period 1982-1992 for the Nikkei against the period 1992-2002 for the S&P500. The similarity is uncanny. However, there seems to have been a divergence after 2002 with the S&P recovering after 2002 while the Nikkei remained in a 12-year funk in the period 1992-2004.

While I don't think we will return to the returns that people came to expect from the S&P, I also don't think we are headed for a prolonged slump like the Nikkei experienced. A big reason for the Nikkei's decline was the Japanese practice of cross-holding where two companies doing business together would cement the relationship by buying large chunks of each other's stock. At the peak in 1990 more than half of the Nikkei's market cap was cross-held. As the slump began, companies began dumping their cross-holdings exacerbating the market decline. By the time the market hit bottom, less than 20% of the Nikkei's market cap was cross-held. This much healthier number is probably part of the reason that the Nikkei has been able to stabilize and start climbing again.

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