Wednesday, 16 March 2011

On the Ground in Japan

By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Just got a brief e-mail from my brother who lives in Tokyo:

I am fine… I flew standby to West Japan (Kyushu). I'm now in Kumamoto. I am in an unfamiliar

city without a hotel reservation at a time when many are fleeing Tokyo.

We spoke on the phone Sunday night, and he told me the story:

When the earthquake first hit, the building started moving immediately. It was crazy… Walking
around my office felt like walking on a waterbed. I hustled away from the window, toward the
bookshelves. Then books started falling, so I knew I had to get out of there.


I grabbed my coat and keys and started rushing down the stairs. I got stopped on about the
10th floor because of the crowd. At that point, it felt like I was on a crowded boat in a storm
at sea, getting tossed back and forth.


I finally made it outside, looking for solid ground. It didn't exist… It felt like I was walking around
on Jell-O.


He also explained that an earthquake is different from what we Floridians are used to with
hurricanes. He realized it during the worst of the earthquake… "The nice thing about a
hurricane is,
you know when it's coming, you know roughly how strong it is, and most
important,
you know when it'll be over."

This is the worst crisis in Japan since World War II…

The positive spin on Japan's tragedy will be that this destruction will cause rebuilding that might
kick Japan's economy into gear once again, like it did after World War II.

Unfortunately, it doesn't work that way. In the 1946 book
Economics in One Lesson, author
Henry Hazlitt exposed the fallacy here…
No man burns down his own house on the theory that
the need to rebuild it will stimulate his energies
.

What's true for one man is true for a country. You can't argue the destruction will be a net
benefit to the Japanese economy.

But Japan
will rebuild… to get back to where it was.

And as I've told you,
small stocks in Japan are the cheapest stocks in the world – by far.

They're even cheaper now… Over two days, Japan's TOPIX (a broad stock market index) fell
more than it ever has since its inception in 1949.

People are selling first and asking questions later. Japanese stocks as a whole are trading at
just 1.06 times book value. (Compare that to the Dow, which goes for 2.75 times book.)


Small-cap Japanese stocks are trading at just 0.7 times book value – or a 30% discount to
book value – and 0.34 times sales. This is off-the-charts cheap.

Those are the statistics of the WisdomTree Japan Small Cap Dividend Fund (DFJ).

DFJ is currently a recommendation in my
True Wealth newsletter. Your upside potential is
hundreds of percent. And in
True Wealth, we limit our risk to a 25% trailing stop. We will
stick to that trailing stop discipline.

Even with the devastation in Japan, I still believe DFJ has the potential to turn out to be a
fantastic investment.

Good investing,