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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThis Portfolio Manager is significantly positive on India over the next 3 to 5 yearsBhuvnesh Singh, Portfolio Manager at Comgest, broadly talks about the performance of Indian consumer goods and his outlook on the Indian economy in the next 3 to 5 years.
Persons: Bhuvnesh Singh Locations: India
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailComgest: 'no real need' for Bank of Japan to adjust monetary policyRichard Kaye of Comgest believes that monetary policy from the Bank of Japan will remain accommodative since inflation remains well controlled. He maintains that the strength of Japan's economy lies in its small companies, and hopes for potential reforms to ease succession planning in these companies.
Persons: Richard Kaye, Comgest Organizations: Bank of Japan, Bank of Locations: Bank of Japan
As Japanese stocks plummet, confirming a bear market, there are opportunities in small-cap and domestic-focused companies, according to fund manager Richard Kaye. 'Yen is just getting normal' Kaye believes the Yen's appreciation is a return to normalcy rather than an anomaly. "If you look even on Friday in all the bloodbath, domestic names, small cap names [were] actually outperforming," he noted. Indeed, the MSCI Japan Small Cap index has fallen 8.6% since July 11, outperforming the 14.4% decline in the MSCI Japan index on a local currency basis. In U.S. dollar terms, the losses, while proportionate, are smaller, with ETFs such as the iShares MSCI Japan Small-Cap ETF falling by 2.1% compared to the iShares MSCI Japan ETF, which is down 8.9% over the same period.
Persons: Richard Kaye, Kaye, Yen, CNBC's, They've, Warren, sayonara, I've Organizations: Growth, Toyota, Sony, U.S ., Japan ETF, Kobe, U.S, Mitsubishi, Mitsui, Sumitomo Locations: Comgest, Japan
The yen is 'just getting normal,' portfolio manager says
  + stars: | 2024-08-05 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe yen is 'just getting normal,' portfolio manager saysRichard Kaye, portfolio manager at Comgest, addresses talk of a strengthening Japanese yen, saying that the currency is in fact "normalizing."
Persons: Richard Kaye
Portfolio manager Richard Kaye is bullish on the Japanese market and believes it offers an opportunity "a lot of people don't recognize." The stronger performance of Japanese equities follows the Tokyo Exchange Group's push for reforms last year. Stocks to play Kaye believes several sectors and stocks in Japan make good plays right now. Among the companies on his radar are Fanuc Corp and Keyence Corp which are in the business of automation products. In medical electronics and health care, Kaye is bullish on Shimadzu Corp and Sysmex Corp .
Persons: Richard Kaye, Kaye, CNBC's Organizations: Tokyo Exchange, Fanuc, Keyence, Shimadzu Corp, Sysmex Corp, Tokyo Disney Resort, Tokyo Stock Exchange, U.S Locations: Japan, Asia, China, Tokyo, U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailYen movements matter for sector leadership and allocation, portfolio manager saysRichard Kaye, portfolio manager for Japan equities at Comgest, discusses how the Japanese yen's strength or weakness might affect various sectors.
Persons: Richard Kaye Organizations: Japan
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailJapan's semiconductor industry is 'back' and is a 'very exciting story,' portfolio manager saysRichard Kaye, portfolio manager at Comgest, says "geopolitically, Japan is very well placed."
Persons: Richard Kaye, geopolitically Locations: Japan
Akihiko Matsuura, president of UA Zensen, center, raises his fist with members of the union during a rally for the annual wage negotiations in Tokyo, Japan, on Thursday, March 7, 2024. But will the "shunto" hikes really work for its legions of salarymen? However, headline inflation, which has been above the Bank of Japan's 2% target since April 2022, hits the entire population. This means that the generous pay raise negotiated by the unions leave out almost 84% of Japan's workforce. The recent wage negotiations are also likely to benefit mostly workers in large Japanese companies, while employees at small and medium enterprises might have to face rising prices without a commensurate hike to their salaries.
Persons: Akihiko Matsuura, Richard Kaye, Comgest, Japan Organizations: UA, Japanese Trade Union Confederation, Japan International Labour Foundation, Bank of Japan's, CNBC Locations: Tokyo, Japan
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPortfolio manager: shunto wage negotiations are 'not a sustainable indicator' of Japan's inflationRichard Kaye of Comgest cautions against investors reading too much into Japan's spring wage negotiations, saying that it is "important to bear in mind that the 'shunto' only captures a fraction of Japanese workers".
Persons: Richard Kaye, Comgest
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPortfolio manager says Softbank's Arm is still in its early stages of growthRichard Kaye, a portfolio manager at Comgest, says Arm's share price, which has "moved dramatically" since its listing, has "started to understand that."
Persons: Softbank's, Richard Kaye
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailJapanese equity investors to shift away from bank and inflation trades: Portfolio managerRichard Kaye of Comgest says the interest in Japanese equities has been in "crowded trades" but expects sector leadership to change. He explains why he sees renewable energy as a sunrise industry in Japan.
Persons: Richard Kaye, Comgest Locations: Japan
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailArm is only a part of the whole investment universe of SoftBank, says portfolio managerRichard Kaye, portfolio manager at Comgest, says the Arm initial public offering is an "important game changer," but there will be "other game changing events."
Persons: Richard Kaye
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWe're very happy to be holding Fast Retailing, says portfolio managerRichard Kaye of Comgest says the company, which is the parent of Uniqlo, is "doing fantastically well in Asia."
Amancio Ortega set up the first Zara store in A Coruna in the north west of Spain in 1975. Marta Ortega started from the bottom at Inditex, stacking shelves at a Bershka store when she was 23. Ortega, whose father owns 59.3% of Inditex, has mainly worked in the background, leaving the spotlight to the CEO. "We feel that Marta Ortega has repositioned Zara slightly upwards," said Patricia Cifuentes, analyst at the investment banking arm of Spanish investment firm Bestinver. "Reinforcing that Zara sells fashion, not just clothes, has allowed Inditex to increase prices and protect the margins amidst the inflationary storm."
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBank of Japan's new governor won't lead to 'significant departure' from policies: Portfolio managerRichard Kaye of Comgest says inflation in Japan is still lower than that of other economies.
New York CNN —The Federal Reserve is all but guaranteed to announce Wednesday that it will once again raise interest rates. The Fed bumped up rates by three-quarters of a percentage point in the past four meetings (June, July, September and November). The more widely watched Consumer Price Index data for November comes out Tuesday, just a day before the Fed announcement. Jones still thinks the Fed will raise rates by only half a point this week and may look to hike them just a quarter point in early 2023. It seems likely that the Fed will cut its GDP target and raise its expectations for the jobless rate and consumer prices.
SoftBank's Vision Fund just experienced one of its most dismal years in its history. SoftBank's Vision Fund was once a power broker, having raised a jaw-dropping $100 billion in 2017, followed by plans to raise $108 billion for Vision Fund 2 in 2019 — two of the largest venture-investing vehicles ever established. But insiders are now questioning if it will ever regain influence, according to 11 ex-Vision Fund investors, former employees, VCs, and industry analysts who weighed in on the future of the Vision Fund. One ex-Vision Fund investor described Son, now taking the reins of Vision Fund 2, as someone who is "not a manager." Given its investing performance so far, the obvious question is what happens once Vision Fund 2 has reached full investment.
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