Japan's 10-year government yields were at 0.5% on Thursday - the upper limit of the central bank’s policy band, which was widened to 0.5% from 0.25% in December. Some market participants bet the Bank of Japan will raise the cap further or even abandon the yield-curve control policy, and such step would prompt further selling in foreign bonds, and inflows into domestic bonds.
"The hedging cost is still high, and that's shown in the
inverted yield curve. So the long-term holders like lifers still
have to stay away from foreign bond investment right now," said
Nomura's Matsuzawa.
Data showed that Japanese investors also disposed of 440.4
billion yen worth of foreign equities, marking their fifth
straight week of net selling.
Meanwhile, foreign investors exited 225.2 billion yen worth
of Japanese bonds after 2.7 trillion worth of net purchases in
the previous week. They drew 208.9 billion yen out of long-term
and 16.3 billion yen out of short-term bonds.
Japanese equities saw a marginal 520 million yen worth of
foreign selling after obtaining cross-border inflows for five
weeks in a row.
Foreigners sold 226.36 billion yen in cash equities but
pulled in 225.84 billion yen worth of derivatives.
($1 = 136.6100 yen)
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Japanese investments in overseas debt securities Japanese investments in stocks abroad Foreign flows into Japanese debt securities Foreign flows into Japanese stocks ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
(Reporting by Gaurav Dogra and Patturaja Murugaboopathy in
Bengaluru, Kevin Buckland in Tokyo
Editing by Vidya Ranganathan and Raissa Kasolowsky)