Tokyo Stock Exchange launches shakeup to attract foreign investors
Japan's flagship Tokyo Stock Exchange launched its biggest shake up in decades to attract foreign investors. Alex Rankine explains why Japan's investment prospects are attractive right now.

This week the Tokyo Stock Exchange launched its biggest shake up since 1961 in a bid to attract foreign investors. The exchange has scrapped a “cumbersome system of four separate boards” for a more streamlined split into three new sections – “prime, standard and growth”, say Eri Sugiura and Leo Lewis in the Financial Times.
A key part of the plan is to make prime a more exclusive category than the unwieldy “first section” it replaces. That includes tougher requirements on market capitalisation and corporate governance (an area in which Japan has long lagged).
One-third of board seats are supposed to be held by outside directors. Such rules are meant to prod firms towards reform. But numerous loopholes have disappointed critics, with companies let into prime even if they fail to qualify so long as they show how they plan to do so “at some unspecified point in the future”. The reform looks to be a “squandered opportunity”.
Subscribe to MoneyWeek
Subscribe to MoneyWeek today and get your first six magazine issues absolutely FREE

Sign up to Money Morning
Don't miss the latest investment and personal finances news, market analysis, plus money-saving tips with our free twice-daily newsletter
Don't miss the latest investment and personal finances news, market analysis, plus money-saving tips with our free twice-daily newsletter
Cheap yen, cheap stocks
But other developments could draw foreign investors to Japan. Core consumer inflation is still running at just 0.6% per year, so the Bank of Japan is sticking to its policy of ultra-loose money, unlike other central banks. That includes unlimited purchases of government bonds to keep borrowing costs low, meaning that overseas currencies offer higher rates. That’s prompting bond investors to sell the yen, which has slumped to a seven-year low against the dollar.
Loose policies and a weak yen should be a tailwind for stocks. “Taking comparative rates of inflation into account, the yen has halved in value against the dollar since 1995, taking it back to levels not seen since the early 1970s,” says Peter Tasker in Nikkei Asia.
That makes Japanese products and services look “extraordinarily cheap”. That will incentivise the onshoring of supply chains – a theme in vogue at the moment – as well as “the mother of all tourist booms” once global travel picks up. The “bargains” on offer in the “great Japanese discount store… will not be there forever”.
That said, long-term investors still need to see economic reforms, not a cheap currency. Tokyo has been “courting a weak yen” for at least two decades, says William Pesek, also in Nikkei Asia. That has delivered “record profits” for export-oriented businesses, but it has also depressed wages, acted as a drag on innovation and investment, and reduced “the urgency to restructure the economy”.
In 2013, then-prime minister Shinzo Abe promised bold changes to end Japan’s stagnation. But of the “three arrows” in his programme – easier money, fiscal reform and less red tape – only the monetary one “was fully deployed” and now even “that one is falling to earth” along with the yen. “If the secret of success was a weak currency, then Argentina and Venezuela would be booming.”
Get the latest financial news, insights and expert analysis from our award-winning MoneyWeek team, to help you understand what really matters when it comes to your finances.
Alex is an investment writer who has been contributing to MoneyWeek since 2015. He has been the magazine’s markets editor since 2019.
Alex has a passion for demystifying the often arcane world of finance for a general readership. While financial media tends to focus compulsively on the latest trend, the best opportunities can lie forgotten elsewhere.
He is especially interested in European equities – where his fluent French helps him to cover the continent’s largest bourse – and emerging markets, where his experience living in Beijing, and conversational Chinese, prove useful.
Hailing from Leeds, he studied Philosophy, Politics and Economics at the University of Oxford. He also holds a Master of Public Health from the University of Manchester.
-
RICS: homebuyers are returning after stamp duty shock
The housing market has been subdued since stamp duty thresholds dropped in April, but there are signs of a recovery
-
Reducing cash ISA limit will make lending difficult and expensive, warn providers
An open letter from the Building Societies Association has urged the chancellor to keep the cash ISA limit at £20,000. We look at whether a smaller cash ISA allowance will make it harder to get a mortgage or loan
-
AJ Bell: a fine British fintech going cheap
Opinion Don’t overlook investment platform AJ Bell, a significantly undervalued British business with an excellent financial base
-
Investors remain calm as the Middle East war unfolds
Conflict in the Middle East has failed to shake oil or stock markets. Can the peace hold?
-
The British railway industry is in rude health – here's why investors should jump aboard
The railway industry has bounced back from the devastating impact of the pandemic and is entering a new phase of development – and profitability
-
Infrastructure investing: a haven of stable growth amid market turmoil
From booming construction in emerging markets to digital and green transitions, the infrastructure sector offers security, returns and long-term opportunities
-
The costly myth of “sell in May”
Opinion May 2025's strong returns for US stocks have once again shown that putting too much weight on seasonal patterns will only make investors poorer, says Max King
-
Who’s driving Tesla?
As Elon Musk steps back from government with his eyes on the stars, investors ask if he’s still behind the wheel at his electric-car maker.
-
Investment opportunities in the world of Coca-Cola
There is far more to Coca-Cola than just one giant firm. The companies that bottle and distribute the ubiquitous soft drink are promising investments in their own right.
-
Streaming services are the new magic money tree for investors – but for how long?
Opinion Streaming services are in full bloom and laden with profits, but beware – winter is coming, warns Matthew Lynn