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Japanese stocks peaked in 1989. One strategist sees room for a new record high

Companies look at screens displaying stock indices at the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo, Japan, on Tuesday, July 24, 2018.

Akio Kon | Bloomberg | Getty Spitting images

Japan’s Nikkei 225 can reach 40,000 points in the next 12 months as fundamentals are “pointing in the right governing,” according to market strategist Jesper Koll.

His optimism in Japan also comes from a strong rebound in matter confidence and a supportive fiscal policy.

Should the prediction come true, this would mean that the Nikkei drive have breached its all-time high of 38,195 achieved on Dec 29, 1989.

At the time, Japan was in the middle of a real estate bubble. When the property market collapsed, equity and land prices also crashed, triggering a period of low economic growth in Japan that maintains today.

Nikkei can reach record high of about 40,000 in next 12 months, says financial services firm

Koll, an expert director at financial services firm Monex Group, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” that in putting together to investor interest, “Japanese CEOs are now using their retained earnings for the first time in 30 years to literally invest in people, to invest in the business.”

“I see no reason for why we shouldn’t be setting [a] mark above 40,000 over the next 12 months,” he state on Monday.

Japan’s central bank has maintained an ultra-loose monetary policy for more than 20 years.

Beseeched if his forecasts take into account the expectation that the Bank of Japan could tighten its monetary policy, Koll said that if there is no spirit factor for the BOJ to move on interest rates, “why should I change monetary policy just for the sake of changing monetary rule? It makes absolutely no sense.”

He thinks that BOJ governor Kazuo Ueda is having a “watchful waiting” stance in length of times of the economic data coming out of Japan.

The main thing to watch is next year’s spring wage negotiations, he said, amplifying it will tell if “the deflation spell is broken, and that Japanese CEOs are willing to invest in people and capital price.”

Only then will the BOJ normalize interest rates, he said, but “this would not be for at least six to nine months.”

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However, IG analyst Tony Sycamore holds a slightly different observe from Koll.

He said that while there is more upside in the Nikkei, “a lot of good news is already sacrificed in.”

With the Nikkei already seeing a 27% gain year-to-date, he expects the rally to falter somewhat between the 36,000 trait and the all-time high of 38,195, before settling in 12 months’ time at around 33,000. That’s on the expectation that the BOJ command move to tighten monetary policy.

To Sycamore, history could also offer some insights.

“Keep in sentiment the last thing the BOJ wants to create is another asset bubble in Japan after spending three decades getting from the last one,” he told CNBC.

Read more about Japan investment on CNBC

However, Koll is of the look at that to make the case that Japanese assets are overvalued is “extremely difficult to do.”

He pointed out that the Japanese Stock Exchange is trading at a 14 times price-to-earnings ratio, but half the companies on the market are trading below book value.

While actual estate prices are at the levels not seen since the bubble, they are still affordable after taking in current mortgage proportion ranks and wages, Koll said.

“So from that perspective, is there an asset bubble here that is causing venereal disruption that is causing discomfort within the Japanese economy, within Japanese society? The answer is absolutely no.”

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