Business | Flyover country

Japanese businesses are trapped between America and China

Could geopolitics kill off an incipient corporate revival?

Birds fly in front of Mt. Fuji and a crane at a port in Tokyo, Japan.
Photograph: Reuters
|Tokyo

Not since the 1980s have Japanese businesses generated so much excitement. Japanese companies’ profit margins have doubled in the past decade or so. They are forking out twice as much to their owners in the form of dividends and share buy-backs as they did ten years ago. Shareholder-friendly changes to corporate governance in Japan have caused foreign investors to flock to the country once again. Having languished for decades, the Nikkei 225 index, which tracks the value of the country’s largest listed firms, is up by 25% over the past year (see chart 1). In February it at last exceeded the record it set in 1989, just before Japan’s bubble burst.

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This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Flyover country”

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