April 26, 2024

Hope in Japan That Shinzo Abe’s ‘Abenomics’ May Be a Cure

A humbled Sony — once a titan of Japan Inc. — recently sprang back into the black for the first year in five years, courtesy of a plunging yen. Honda, another corporate icon, triumphantly announced a return to Formula One racing, rejoining an exclusive club of high-performance carmakers after having slinked away when cash ran low.

Even some of Japan’s wary consumers are beginning to indulge. At the plush Takashimaya department store in Tokyo’s financial district, a clerk reported that $20,000 watches had become hot sellers. And a cut-rate sushi chain, which flourished in difficult times, just started a line of upscale restaurants for customers newly able to afford “petite extravagances.”

The reason for the exuberance? Early — and some say deceptive — signs that new Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s economic shock therapy, called Abenomics, might just be working.

His plan, one of the world’s most audacious experiments in economic policy in recent memory, combines a flood of cheap cash (doubling the money supply in two years), traditional fiscal stimulus and deregulation of Japan’s notoriously ingrown corporate culture. The hope is that this will yank Japan from a debilitating deflationary spiral of lower prices and diminished expectations, stirring what Keynes called the “animal spirits” of investors and consumers.

And so it has. The stock market has soared more than 60 percent over the past year, and the yen has lost more than a quarter of its value, lifting corporate earnings in a country that is dependent on exports.

Last week, Abenomics got an early report card. Japan’s $5 trillion economy grew at a robust annualized pace of 3.5 percent in the first quarter, and — most important for Mr. Abe’s notion that consumer confidence is key — household consumption accounted for the lion’s share of that growth. Although there were some signs of weakness, most notably a drop in business investment, the numbers were a promising sign that the good news was not confined to financial markets.

“Young people even in their 40s don’t remember Japan’s good times,” said Hiroshi Sato, a 64-year-old executive treating himself to one of Takashimaya’s fancy watches. Choosing one from a black velvet tray, he explained his purchase as a bet on Mr. Abe’s success after two decades of his predecessors’ failures.

“I’m hopeful,” he said, “that this one is finally the real recovery.”

So far, that optimism appears to be largely limited to the nation’s well-to-do, including its tiny stock-holding class, and the weakening of the yen is creating tensions with its Asian neighbors. But if the optimism spreads, Japan will have taken a crucial first step toward recovery, persuading its famously cautious savers to spend their money to help revive the economy.

“This is Japan’s best chance in 20 years to escape from its deflationary mind-set,” said Hajime Takata, chief economist at Mizuho Research Institute in Tokyo.

That Japan would try such a seemingly radical policy path after years of political paralysis reflects a newfound feeling of urgency. With China’s economy and territorial ambitions growing, the Japanese have begun to see the potential dangers of resigning themselves to what many have called a “genteel decline.”

The fear has given Mr. Abe, who took office in December, some room to maneuver, even as he promises to take on entrenched interests through deregulation and to raise inflation. A pickup in the inflation rate would cause pain for Japan’s legion of politically active retirees, but nudge people to spend before their money loses value — reversing the deflationary psychology of delaying purchases in anticipation of ever-lower prices.

It has also thrust him into an unusual role for a Japanese prime minister, a generally colorless bunch who make decisions behind closed doors. Mr. Abe, 58, has become his country’s cheerleader in chief, proclaiming to audiences that “Japan is back” and even sharing personal details most Japanese politicians eschew. Referring to his own humiliating departure from his first term as prime minister, brought on by a stress-related illness, Mr. Abe tells people that they, too, can recover.

“It is my job to awaken Japan from the spell of prolonged deflation and lost confidence,” he declared in a recent speech to business leaders in Tokyo.

Despite the signs of success for Abenomics, skeptics abound.

Makiko Inoue and Hisako Ueno contributed reporting.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/21/world/asia/hope-in-japan-that-abenomics-may-be-turning-things-around.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Cache: News Corp.’s Interest in Formula One Raises Alarms

PARIS — Rupert Murdoch has not even signed a check yet for British Sky Broadcasting, his most recent blockbuster acquisition project, but already his son James is looking for ways to enhance the pay-TV company’s programming lineup.

Final regulatory approval for the purchase of BSkyB by News Corp., the Murdoch media empire, is expected any day now. Then it ought to be only a matter of time before News Corp. and BSkyB settle on a price for the 61 percent stake in BSkyB that News Corp. does not already own.

Meanwhile, James Murdoch, who runs News Corp.’s operations outside the United States, is kicking the tires of Formula One auto racing. News Corp. and the Agnelli family of Italy, which indirectly controls the Ferrari race team, said last week that they were exploring “the possibility of creating a consortium with a view to formulating a long-term plan for the development of Formula One in the interests of the participants and the fans.”

Don’t be fooled by the circumlocution. News Corp.’s pursuit of BSkyB got off to a similarly slow start. So did its purchase of Dow Jones, the owner of The Wall Street Journal. The Murdochs, in a reverse of conventional merger-and-acquisition protocol, like to sort out regulatory issues and other potential sticking points, then strike deals.

What the statement means is that the Murdochs are prepared to spend a lot of money to put Formula One racing on BSkyB, as well as on other News Corp.-owned or affiliated pay-TV siblings like Sky Deutschland, Sky Italia and Star TV in Asia. Fox, a free network owned by News Corp., already shows some Formula One races in the United States.

Formula One is one of a shrinking number of high-profile sports events that has not yet made the leap from free to pay television. Bernie Ecclestone, chief executive of Formula One, has pledged to keep the races on free television wherever and whenever possible.

This is intended to protect sponsors by giving them the widest possible audiences. Sponsorship generates more than $700 million a year for the Formula One teams, according to analysts.

But sponsorship revenue fell sharply during the recession, when banks, which had replaced tobacco companies on many teams’ sponsorship rosters, pulled out of Formula One.

If Formula One shifted to pay TV in key markets, audience numbers would shrink, potentially limiting sponsors’ exposure.

“That would clearly be a massive concern if I were to advise a Formula One sponsor,” said Kevin Alavy, who analyzes television audiences at Initiative, a media buying agency.

But Mr. Ecclestone’s strategy of seeking the broadest reach may have restricted Formula One’s income from television rights deals, which bring in about $450 million annually, according to Formula Money, a report on the business of Formula One.

“There’s a limit to what free broadcasters can pay, because they aren’t able to earn it back through advertising,” said Tim Westcott, an analyst at Screen Digest. “Pay TV typically has much deeper pockets.”

Yet if News Corp. owned Formula One, television rights revenue might shrink, because News Corp. could presumably grant the rights free to its pay-TV subsidiaries (assuming regulators allowed this to happen). That could mean a further loss of income for Formula One teams, which currently get a share of the central organization’s revenue.

This helps explain why news of the Murdochs’ interest in Formula One has been met with alarm by a number of team owners, who are also wary of the involvement of the Agnelli holding company, Exor, because of its involvement with Ferrari. News Corp. presumably would have to compensate the teams for any revenue loss.

Negotiating this will take time, but the Murdochs have shown in recent acquisitions that they are willing to wait. The pursuit of Formula One may turn into another example of the tortoise beating the hare.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/09/business/media/09cache.html?partner=rss&emc=rss