Overall corporate pre-tax profit margins in Japan decelerated in the recent quarter, but before one panics and says that margins are about to plummet, one should realize that there are long-term structural corporate-governance reasons for the overall upward trend and that the 2005-2007 period showed that profit margins can plateau at a high level for an extended period of time.
Indeed, while the overall four-quarter average fell from its record level, this is due to the impacts of a fairly mild global economy and the strong Yen, while the non-manufacturing sector, which is nearly entirely domestically focused, soared to a record high.
The fact remains that, partially due to the encouragement of the Abe administration, Japanese corporations are continuing their structural shift towards higher profitability. Abenomics is “icing on the cake” of the “Show Me the Money” corporate governance improvement that we have long-highlighted in our thought leadership effort on Japan.
Indeed, while increasing the number of independent directors and other recent governance issues are very important in the intermediate term for Japan, it is crucial for investors to understand that the profitability message has actually been understood by most Japanese corporates for over a decade. This is shown by the divergence in the profit margins from the trend in GDP growth in the charts above, showing that even though GDP growth has remained subdued, profit margins have surged.
Since the Koizumi era, Japan has embarked on major rationalizations in most industries, with the number of players usually reduced from seven down to three. The fruits of this restructuring were slower to ripen than in Western world examples, and they were hidden by a series of crises (the Lehman shock, the turbulence in China, the strong Yen and of course, the Tohoku tsunami), but since Abenomics began, the global backdrop for Japan has been stable and there have been no domestic crises, thus allowing the fruits to ripen.
Conclusion
We expect that the overall four-quarter average pre-tax profit margin will rise in coming quarters due to the weaker Yen, and that non-manufacturing margins should remain at a high level.
Furthermore, many sectors are continuing their rationalizations and cost-cutting that will help support their profit margins. Of course, if the Yen were to weaken to 120:USD, then even the manufacturing sector’s profit margin will likely move back to, or above, its prior high.
One should also note that these Ministry of Finance statistics do not cover post-tax income, and due to recent corporate tax cuts, the overall net profit margin (excluding extraordinary write-offs) is likely expanding even more sharply than the pre-tax data shown above.
John Vail is Chief Global Strategist at Nikko AM.