日本最大的养老基金开始变卖日本国债!

来源:百度文库 编辑:超级军网 时间:2024/04/29 15:36:23
Sayonara internal funding. In what we suspect will become a major issue (and warned in April of last year), Bloomberg reports that Japan’s public pension fund, the world’s largest, said it has been selling domestic government bonds as the number of people eligible for retirement payments increases. "Payouts are getting bigger than insurance revenue, so we need to sell Japanese government bonds to raise cash." It would appear the Ponzi has reached it's Tipping Point. Japan’s population is aging, and baby boomers born in the wake of World War II are beginning to reach 65 and eligible for pensions. That’s putting GPIF under pressure to sell JGBs so it can cover the increase in payouts.

The fund needs to raise about 8.87 trillion yen this fiscal year. GPIF is historically one of the biggest buyers of Japanese debt and held 71.9 trillion yen, or 63 percent of its assets, in domestic bonds as of March.

This leaves the biggest question "to whom will the pension fund sell?" After all it is all marginal and everyone just front-runs the biggest players (Governments and their Central-Bank caring internal funds). Now that the pensions funds are out, there is no more incentive to frontrun them - a la The Fed - which is summed up by the fund's manager "There isn’t much value in short-term notes as the BOJ’s massive asset purchases have made their yields extremely low."



From our April 2011 thoughts:

    In the world of bonds, few things have perplexed investors as much as the ridiculously low (and going lower) rates of Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs), at last check yielding 1.22%. Granted "deflation" in Japan has long been quoted as the key driver for the ongoing decline in real and nominal rates, but in practical market terms it was always the fact that there was a buyer of first and last resort, usually this being either Japanese citizens directly or their proxy, the Japanese Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) that kept yields in check and sliding.



and from SocGen's Dylan Grice 2010 views (full presentation here):

    This is far from just a JGB market problem. As Japan's retirees age and run down their wealth, Japan's policymakers will be forced to sell assets, including US Treasuries currently worth $750bn, or Y70 trillion "eight months" worth of domestic financing. At nearly 10% of the outstanding US Treasury stock, this might well precipitate other government funding crises (bearing in mind that the Japanese model is the argument buttressing confidence in Western government bonds in the face of deteriorating fiscal conditions). At the very least I'd expect it to trigger an international bond market rout scary enough to spook all other asset classes.



And As Kyle Bass has questioned numerous times, will 2010 be the beginning of the end of flawed Keynesian economics?

    Maybe Japan's will be the crisis that wakes up the rest of the world and triggers some tough decisions on world-wide debt loads. Or maybe not - maybe the Greeks will beat them to it? or the Irish or the UK, or the US? Like banks in 2007, developed market governments today rely on sustained capital markets more than any time in their history. What if they shut?

日本债务之高堪称世界之最,但是没有像希腊一样爆发,是因为日本国债大多数是依靠本国国民购买,但是最新消息指出,日本国债最大的持有者日本养老基金由于已经无力继续维持,必须通过变卖日本国债套取现金……Sayonara internal funding. In what we suspect will become a major issue (and warned in April of last year), Bloomberg reports that Japan’s public pension fund, the world’s largest, said it has been selling domestic government bonds as the number of people eligible for retirement payments increases. "Payouts are getting bigger than insurance revenue, so we need to sell Japanese government bonds to raise cash." It would appear the Ponzi has reached it's Tipping Point. Japan’s population is aging, and baby boomers born in the wake of World War II are beginning to reach 65 and eligible for pensions. That’s putting GPIF under pressure to sell JGBs so it can cover the increase in payouts.

The fund needs to raise about 8.87 trillion yen this fiscal year. GPIF is historically one of the biggest buyers of Japanese debt and held 71.9 trillion yen, or 63 percent of its assets, in domestic bonds as of March.

This leaves the biggest question "to whom will the pension fund sell?" After all it is all marginal and everyone just front-runs the biggest players (Governments and their Central-Bank caring internal funds). Now that the pensions funds are out, there is no more incentive to frontrun them - a la The Fed - which is summed up by the fund's manager "There isn’t much value in short-term notes as the BOJ’s massive asset purchases have made their yields extremely low."



From our April 2011 thoughts:

    In the world of bonds, few things have perplexed investors as much as the ridiculously low (and going lower) rates of Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs), at last check yielding 1.22%. Granted "deflation" in Japan has long been quoted as the key driver for the ongoing decline in real and nominal rates, but in practical market terms it was always the fact that there was a buyer of first and last resort, usually this being either Japanese citizens directly or their proxy, the Japanese Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) that kept yields in check and sliding.



and from SocGen's Dylan Grice 2010 views (full presentation here):

    This is far from just a JGB market problem. As Japan's retirees age and run down their wealth, Japan's policymakers will be forced to sell assets, including US Treasuries currently worth $750bn, or Y70 trillion "eight months" worth of domestic financing. At nearly 10% of the outstanding US Treasury stock, this might well precipitate other government funding crises (bearing in mind that the Japanese model is the argument buttressing confidence in Western government bonds in the face of deteriorating fiscal conditions). At the very least I'd expect it to trigger an international bond market rout scary enough to spook all other asset classes.



And As Kyle Bass has questioned numerous times, will 2010 be the beginning of the end of flawed Keynesian economics?

    Maybe Japan's will be the crisis that wakes up the rest of the world and triggers some tough decisions on world-wide debt loads. Or maybe not - maybe the Greeks will beat them to it? or the Irish or the UK, or the US? Like banks in 2007, developed market governments today rely on sustained capital markets more than any time in their history. What if they shut?

日本债务之高堪称世界之最,但是没有像希腊一样爆发,是因为日本国债大多数是依靠本国国民购买,但是最新消息指出,日本国债最大的持有者日本养老基金由于已经无力继续维持,必须通过变卖日本国债套取现金……
日本的国民金融资产全部快成为国债白条了   

不是吧...,要真这么搞,那日本不就玩完了...。
再见内部资金。在什么我们怀疑将成为1的主要问题,并在去年4月警告,彭博社报道,日本的公共养老基金,世界上最大的,表示它已被出售的人享有退休金增加数国内政府债券。 “取款大于保险收入,所以我们需要买入日本政府债券,以筹集现金。”它会出现庞兹已经达到了它的引爆点。日本的人口老化,并在第二次世界大战后出生的婴儿潮一代开始达到65和养老金的资格。这是把GPIF的,因此它可以覆盖在增加的支出压力下卖出日债。

该基金需要提高本财政年度约88700亿日元的。 GPIF是历史上日本国债的最大买家之一,并举行71.9万亿日元,其资产的63%,在截至3月份的国内债券。

这使得最大的问题“的人将退休基金出售?”毕竟这是所有边缘和每个人都只是前端运行的最大的球员(各国政府和他们照顾央行的内部资金)。现在认为,养老金基金都出来,有更多奖励以frontrun他们 - 1 LA美联储 - 这是总结该基金的经理了“有,是不是在短期票据多值作为日央行的大规模资产购买已取得其产量极低。“



从我们4月份的2011年的想法:

    在全球债券,很少有事情困扰投资者多为日本政府债券的低得离谱(会降低)率(日债),收益率为1.22%,在去年检查。授予“通货紧缩”在日本长期以来被引述的实际和名义利率持续下降的主要驱动力,但在实际的市场而言,它总是事实,即有买家的第一和最后的手段,这通常是要么日本公民直接或他们的代理,日本政府退休金投资基金(GPIF),不断检查和滑动的产量。



从兴业银行的迪伦格莱斯2010次(全在这里介绍):

    这是远从仅仅是一种期国债市场的问题。作为日本的退休人员的年龄和运行他们的财富,日本的决策者将被迫出售资产,包括美国国债目前价值7500亿美元,或70元万亿“八个月”值得国内融资。在美国财政部的优秀股票近10%,这可能促使其他政府资金危机(铭记日本模式是在西方的政府债券的信心,在面对不断恶化的财政状况参数buttressing)。至少,我期望它引发的国际债券市场的溃败,够吓人的所有其他资产类别,以寝食不安。



凯尔低音和作为质疑无数次,2010年将是有缺陷的凯恩斯主义经济学年底开始呢?

    也许日本会唤醒世界各地的危机,并引发一些艰难的决定在全球范围内的债务负担。或许不是 - 也许希腊人将击败他们吗?爱尔兰或英国,或美国?像银行于2007年,发达市场政府今天在其历史上任何时候多依靠持续的资本市场。如果他们关闭?

用股沟翻译了一下,大家凑合着看吧。鄙视楼主你个大懒鬼。
不是吧...,要真这么搞,那日本不就玩完了...。
所以说日本的未来充满荆棘。
moskov2012 发表于 2012-7-26 22:38
所以说日本的未来充满荆棘。
大哥别说二哥了
中国未来老龄化程度比日本更加严重
日本还是一个缺乏战略思维的国家,糜烂至此还积极主动的挑起争议,以转嫁民愤,以讨好美国,却不考虑以后的生路。
真的么,好怕怕
有没有机会 落井下石?
唉,真是个比烂的时代。。。
Kyle Bass Vindication Imminent? Largest Japanese Pension Fund Begins To Sell JGBs

Thursday, July 26, 2012

原創翻譯如下:

世界最大的养老基金,日本的公共养老基金GPIF,由于日本人口老化,支付超过収入,被逼要出售手上日本政府国债。GPIF今年需要8.9兆日元(114亿美元)才能过关。GPIF长期购买日本国债,手中63%的资産,71.9兆日元(919亿美元)都是国债。

这就引起一个大问题: 谁来买这日本国债?

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/ky ... nd-begins-sell-jgbs
世界最大的养老基金,日本的公共养老基金GPIF,由于日本人口老化,支付超过収入,被逼要出售手上日本政府国债。GPIF今年需要8.9兆日元(114亿美元)才能过关。GPIF长期购买日本国债,手中63%的资産,71.9兆日元都是国债。

这就引起一个大问题: 谁来买这日本国债?
家家有本难念的帐
moskov2012 发表于 2012-7-26 22:38
所以说日本的未来充满荆棘。
1,现在日本国债收益率太低,2市场对日本国债需求大
大哥别说二哥了 中国未来老龄化程度比日本更加严重
你知道他们现在老龄化是多少吗?25%将来恐怕更恐怖。中国,虽然也有老龄化,但要达到四分之一或者三分之一,你认为可能吗?关注性别比例失调,都比这个靠谱。

swordgd 发表于 2012-7-28 17:22
你知道他们现在老龄化是多少吗?25%将来恐怕更恐怖。中国,虽然也有老龄化,但要达到四分之一或者三分之一 ...


我不“觉得”,我也不会用“我觉得”或者“你觉得”这种极端感性的理由得出结论,我只看统计数据和由数据进行的推导
中国统计年鉴2011
http://www.stats.gov.cn/tjsj/ndsj/2011/indexch.htm
3-3 人口年龄结构和抚养比
2010年中国第六次人口普查结果
http://www.stats.gov.cn/tjsj/pcsj/rkpc/6rp/indexch.htm
总和生育率仅为千分之1181.10,比日本还低
swordgd 发表于 2012-7-28 17:22
你知道他们现在老龄化是多少吗?25%将来恐怕更恐怖。中国,虽然也有老龄化,但要达到四分之一或者三分之一 ...


我不“觉得”,我也不会用“我觉得”或者“你觉得”这种极端感性的理由得出结论,我只看统计数据和由数据进行的推导
中国统计年鉴2011
http://www.stats.gov.cn/tjsj/ndsj/2011/indexch.htm
3-3 人口年龄结构和抚养比
2010年中国第六次人口普查结果
http://www.stats.gov.cn/tjsj/pcsj/rkpc/6rp/indexch.htm
总和生育率仅为千分之1181.10,比日本还低
国家欠国民的债,不可怕