Warren Buffett gave Japan Inc. another stamp of approval and the market is eating it up. Shares of Japan's five largest trading houses surged up to 9% after the Oracle of Omaha signaled Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE:BRK) (NYSE:BRK) is eyeing bigger stakes.
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc (NYSE:MUFG) led the pack, climbing nearly 9%, while Mitsui & Co (OTCPK:MITSY), Marubeni Corp (OTCPK:MARUF) (OTCPK:MARUY), Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc (NYSE:SMFG) and Itochu Corp (NYSE:ITOCF) all jumped between 4% and 7.5%, reported the Financial Times.
Buffett's love affair with Japan is nothing new. Back in 2020, Berkshire quietly snapped up 5% stakes in each of these trading giants, shelling out $6 billion. Fast forward to today and those holdings are worth $23.5 billion.
Now, with the 10% ownership cap lifted, Buffett's annual letter made it clear: "You will likely see Berkshire's ownership of all five increase somewhat."
Translation? Buffett's doubling down.
Why does he love these stocks?
Think of them as Japan's private equity powerhouses with portfolios spanning convenience stores, salmon farms, infrastructure and tech startups.
Jefferies analyst Thanh Ha Pham calls them “the private equity of Japan” but with a Buffett-approved long-term horizon.
For ETF investors, Buffett's Japan bet shines a light on three key funds.
The iShares MSCI Japan ETF (NYSE:EWJ) is up 2.64% year-to-date, while JPMorgan's BetaBuilders Japan ETF (NYSE:BBJP) has climbed 2.37%. But the real standout?
The WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Fund (NYSE:DXJ), which boasts a 3.98% gain over the past year.
The Buffett effect is real and it's not just the trading houses riding the wave.
Sony (NYSE:SONY) has soared 44% in the past year, while Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (NYSE:SMFG) is up nearly 40%. Even Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (NYSE:MUFG) has posted a stellar 24.6% annual gain.
With Japan's corporate reforms, rising dividends and Buffett's backing, this might just be the start of a long-term bull run.
For investors, ignoring Japan now could be like skipping Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) in 2003 – a mistake Buffett himself vowed never to repeat.
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