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HomeBusinessGlobal EconomyPodcastsJapan’s Bull Market Takes Shape
Japan’s Bull Market Takes Shape
Global Economy

Thoughts on the Market

Japan’s Bull Market Takes Shape

Thoughts on the Market
•March 17, 2026•5 min
Thoughts on the Market•Mar 17, 2026

Why It Matters

Understanding Japan’s structural market shift helps investors identify sustainable growth opportunities beyond short‑term stimulus, especially in sectors like AI hardware, advanced materials, and resilient infrastructure. As Japan positions itself for economic security and technological leadership, the episode offers timely insight for anyone tracking Asian equities or global supply‑chain transformations.

Key Takeaways

  • •Takai-ji administration drives structural shift toward economic security
  • •Stocks in 17 strategic domains outperformed by 15% points
  • •Japan emphasizes supply chain redundancy, defense, advanced materials
  • •AI and compute revolution fuels industrial upgrades across sectors
  • •2026 infrastructure budget exceeds 524 yen, spurring construction boom

Pulse Analysis

Japan’s newly elected Prime Minister Sanae Takai‑ji is reshaping the equity market with a clear emphasis on economic security and supply‑chain resilience. Since February, stocks tied to the administration’s 17 strategic domains have outperformed the broader market by roughly 15 percentage points, signaling a shift beyond a simple cyclical rebound. The policy pivot moves away from pure efficiency toward redundancy, bolstering sectors such as defense, advanced materials, critical minerals, shipbuilding and cybersecurity. Investors are interpreting these moves as a structural realignment, positioning capital to capture long‑term growth rather than short‑term stimulus.

The second pillar of Japan’s market transformation is the AI and compute revolution. While some fear over‑investment, the strategy views AI as a hardware‑intensive engine requiring data‑center cooling, expanded power grids, high‑speed communications and abundant critical minerals. This creates a full‑stack upgrade opportunity across industrial stocks. Morgan Stanley’s robotics team projects the global humanoid robotics market could reach $7.5 trillion annually by 2050—three times the combined 2024 revenue of the world’s top 20 automakers. Such nonlinear upside positions Japanese AI‑related firms as potential high‑return assets.

The third driver is massive infrastructure spending. The 2026 national resilience budget tops 524 billion yen, targeting aging assets, disaster‑prone ports, logistics hubs and communication networks. With many post‑bubble structures approaching replacement, the construction cycle is entering an expansion phase that promises durable demand. Market leadership is expected to migrate from upstream materials and power infrastructure to AI, defense and eventually to high‑value applications like drug discovery and quantum computing. For investors, the key is recognizing that Japan’s equity rally is rooted in a reorganization around economic security, AI infrastructure, and long‑term resilience.

Episode Description

Morgan Stanley MUFG ’s Japan Equity Strategist Sho Nakazawa talks about the sectors that are leading the current rebound of Japanese stocks and why these gains may be more than a cyclical shift.

Read more insights from Morgan Stanley.

----- Transcript -----

Welcome to Thoughts on the Market. I’m Sho Nakazawa, Japan Equity Strategist at Morgan Stanley MUFG Securities.

Today: How Japan’s Takaichi administration could define Japan’s stock market for years to come.

It’s Tuesday, March 17th, at 3 PM in Tokyo.

Sanae Takaichi became Japan's first female prime minister on October 21, 2025. She leads a conservative administration that emphasizes defense spending and economic resilience. When Takaichi took office in February, this signaled the start of a structural pivot in Japan’s economy. And markets have responded quickly. Over the past several months, stocks with high exposure to the administration’s 17 strategic domains have outperformed TOPIX by 15 percentage points. That kind of divergence suggests something bigger than a cyclical rebound. Capital is positioned to a structural shift. 

First, there’s the Japanese government’s increased emphasis on economic security and supply chain resilience. This reflects a philosophical shift. For years efficiency ruled: just-in-time supply chains and global optimization. The pandemic and the reorientation towards a multipolar world changed that workflow. Now the emphasis is on redundancy and autonomy – and this has implications for Defense & Space, Advanced Materials & Critical Minerals, Shipbuilding, and Cybersecurity. 

The second pillar of Japan’s structural market shift is AI and the compute revolution. Yes, some investors worry about overinvestment in AI, but we believe in [the] possibility of nonlinear returns as AI breakthroughs occur. And, keep in mind, AI isn’t just software. It requires data-center cooling, communications networks, expanded power grids, and critical minerals. This is a full industrial stack upgrade. Looking further out, the global humanoid robotics market could reach US$7.5 trillion annually by 2050 according to our global robotics team estimates. That’s roughly three times the combined 2024 revenue of the world’s top 20 automakers at about US$2.5 trillion. 

The third force reshaping Japan’s market is infrastructure. The 2026 budget slated towards national resilience initiatives exceeds ¥5 trillion. With aging infrastructure and intensifying natural disasters, resilience spending relates directly to economic security. Ports, logistics, and communications systems are increasingly becoming strategic assets. Our work suggests the long-term construction cycle is entering an expansion phase as bubble-era buildings from the late 1980s reach replacement timing. That points to durable demand rather than a temporary spike. 

With all of this said, what’s also important is how stock market leadership spreads. It tends to move from upstream to downstream – from materials and power infrastructure, to AI, to defense and communications, and eventually to applications like drug discovery, quantum technologies, cybersecurity, and content. Right now, the strongest three-month returns are in Advanced Materials and Critical Minerals, and in Next-Gen Power and Grid Infrastructure. Meanwhile, areas like Cybersecurity and Content have lagged but remain tightly connected in the network. If leadership broadens, those linkages matter. 

The real constraint isn’t political opposition. It’s [the] market itself. If investors decide this is a temporary stimulus rather than sustainable earnings growth, valuations might adjust. But we do believe that Japan’s equity market isn’t simply rallying. It is reorganizing around economic security, AI infrastructure, and national resilience.

Thanks for listening. If you enjoy Thoughts on the Market, please leave us a review wherever you listen and share the podcast with a friend and colleague today.

Show Notes

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