Image Source: Money and Banking Journal
Japan’s largest life insurers are embarking on a significant strategy shift, announcing plans to reduce their holdings of Japanese government bonds (JGBs) in fiscal 2025-a move not seen since 2016. Nippon Life Insurance, the nation’s biggest private life insurer, will trim its JGB balance for the first time in nine years, signaling a cautious approach amid heightened market volatility, low liquidity, and evolving regulatory requirements.
According to their latest asset management disclosures, four of Japan’s top ten life insurers-including Nippon Life and Meiji Yasuda Life-are set to cut JGB positions by a combined 1.3 trillion yen (about $9.1 billion) during the first half of the new fiscal year. This comes even as higher yields have recently attracted both domestic and overseas investors to JGBs. Executives cite concerns over price fluctuations, particularly in the super-long bond segment, and anticipate only modest rate hikes from the Bank of Japan, with a projected terminal rate of 1%.
While some insurers are diversifying into foreign securities and alternative assets, others are maintaining steady or flat positions in JGBs, reflecting differing views on economic risks and monetary policy direction. The move is closely watched by global markets, given Japanese life insurers’ combined assets of nearly ¥390 trillion (about $2.7 trillion).
This recalibration underscores the shifting landscape of Japanese institutional investment and could have ripple effects across both domestic and international bond markets.
Source: Nikkei, Bloomberg, Insurance Business Asia, Reuters
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