As Suga heads to U.S., Japanese stocks with ties to China take a beating

TOKYO (Reuters) -Japanese firms with strong Chinese ties are seeing their shares fall ahead of a meeting of Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga and U.S. President Joe Biden, as investors fear pressure to align Japan more closely with Washington’s tough stance on Beijing.

FILE PHOTO: Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga announces that Tokyo, Kyoto and Okinawa will have pre-emergency status under a new prevention law during a government task force meeting at the prime minister’s office, Tokyo, Japan, April 9, 2021. Eugene Hoshiko/Pool via Reuters

Shippers, retailers and manufacturers of various machines and components with significant dependence on Chinese demand could bear the brunt of further diplomatic tension in the form of trade restrictions or popular boycotts, analysts said.

Suga will on Friday become the first foreign leader to visit the White House since Biden took office in January, widely seen as an indication by both countries as a desire to revitalise their alliance to counter China’s growing clout.

“Suga may be asked to come in step with Washington’s hard-line stance on China, which could worsen Sino-Japanese relations,” Daiwa Securities’ Chief Technical Analyst Eiji Kinouchi said.

Given Japan’s proximity to China, both geographically and economically, any negative impact from worsening relations would be greater on Japan than on Western allies, Kinouchi said.

Japan has taken a softer approach to China, its largest trade partner, on issues as varied as trade and the origins of COVID-19 that have put the world’s most populous country at loggerheads with the United States and its allies.

It stayed out of the West’s coordinated sanctions on Chinese officials last month related to alleged human rights abuses in China’s Xinjiang, which China has denied.

A senior Biden administration official also said Taiwan and preserving the status quo across the Taiwan Strait would be part of the United States’ upcoming talks with Japan.

“Suga will probably get more vaccines from the U.S. In return, he will likely be pressed to get tough on China. So shares of companies with high exposure to China are now capped,” said Arihiro Nagata, general manager of global investment at Sumitomo Mitsui Bank.

RETALIATION FEARS

Hiromichi Shirakawa, vice chairman and chief economist for Japan at Credit Suisse, said concerns about Suga’s visit were weighing on the entire Japanese stock market. “The Nikkei has been capped below 30,000 and that certainly reflect some such concerns.”

Investors fear any shift by Japan to a more hardline stance on contentious issues could prompt Chinese retaliation, official or otherwise, against Japanese interests, analysts said.

The stock price index of Japanese shippers, for whom Chinese demand is widely considered vital, has fallen 5.8% so far this week, versus a 0.4% fall in the broader Nikkei.

Some electronic components makers that had benefited from a global chip shortage have also fallen out of investors’ favour.

TDK Corp, which sells over half of its products to China, lost 6.6% this week. Among others with high Chinese exposure, Taiyo Yuden Co Ltd fell 6.6% and Nitto Denko Corp shed 2.6%.

Yaskawa Electric Corp’s fairly upbeat earnings on Monday failed to prevent its stock from falling. Its figures showed China accounted for a quarter of its sales in the last financial year, versus 19% a year earlier.

In retail, the owner of household goods and clothing chain Muji, Ryohin Keikaku Co Ltd, suffered a backlash from Chinese netizens last month when it said it was “deeply concerned” about reports of forced labour in Xinjiang.

On Wednesday, it said a third-party auditor found no grave breaches of any rules at its Xinjiang organic cotton field. Its stock fell 4.8% on Thursday and is down as much this week.

Fast Retailing Co Ltd, owner of the Uniqlo casual clothing chain – which has a big presence on Chinese high streets – saw its stock fall heavily on Monday.

The China branch of the cotton trade body Better Cotton Initiative said last month it had not found signs of forced labour related to cotton production in Xinjiang.

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