Monday, January 19, 2015

No, The World's Oddest Central Bank Is NOT The SNB, It's the Bank Of Japan

The FT's Gavyn Davies, in yesterday's "The Swiss currency bombshell – cause and effect", made mention of a fact that was most assuredly known to Mr. Davies long before the Jan. 15 action but which seems to have taken some observers by surprise:
...But the SNB is 45 per cent owned by private shareholders, many of whom are individuals, who receive dividends from the SNB. The rest is owned by the cantons, which have been complaining recently about insufficient cash transfers from the SNB....
However, from our Jan. 23, 2013 link to Quartz's "The Bank of Japan is the Weirdest Central Bank in the World":
And to think it looks so normal from the outside. AP Photo/Koji Sasahara
 
As central banks go, you see, Japan’s is one of the world’s strangest. Some examples:
The BoJ is one of the only central banks in the world that is publicly traded. (Belgium’s, on which BoJ is modeled, and Switzerland’s are others.) According to the 1942 Bank of Japan Act, the bank’s stated capital—¥100 million at the time—was “to be contributed to by both the government and non-governmental persons,” with the government taking at least 55%. And sure enough, the Bank of Japan is listed over-the-counter on the Jasdaq under ticker 8301. Today, for instance, it closed at ¥45,850 ($517) per share, down 3.5%, though it’s up 26.7% since a year ago. The only shareholder listed by FactSet is New York-based fund Horizon Asset Management, which holds around 10% of shares outstanding. However, shareholders receive neither voting rights nor dividends.

BoJ’s quantitative easing program has also embraced one of the most unconventional approaches to asset-purchasing out there. The vast majority of central banks decline to buy equities outright (for example, the Federal Reserve’s charter forbids it), though a few exceptions are beginning to emerge.

However, Japan’s central bank has no such squeamishness. Exchange-traded funds, corporate bonds, foreign mutual funds, real estate securities—it’s all game for the BoJ (pdf)....MORE