Economy June 8, 2026 05:18 AM

Japanese Investors Pull Back from Overseas Equities in Largest Monthly Exit Since 2021

Concerns over Middle East tensions and a pullback in AI-linked tech names coincide with shifts into foreign bonds

By Priya Menon
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Japanese investors recorded a net sale of 2.72 trillion yen in foreign equities in May, the biggest monthly withdrawal since April 2021, according to Ministry of Finance data. The pullback came as the MSCI World Index retreated from a record and as flows moved into overseas debt, where net purchases reached their highest level since May 2025.

Japanese Investors Pull Back from Overseas Equities in Largest Monthly Exit Since 2021
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Key Points

  • Japanese investors sold a net 2.72 trillion yen of foreign stocks in May - largest monthly outflow since April 2021.
  • Net purchases of foreign debt securities reached 2.9 trillion yen in May, the biggest inflow into overseas bonds since May 2025.
  • Trust accounts were major sellers of foreign stocks (net 3.38 trillion yen) and large buyers of overseas bonds (net 3.16 trillion yen); investment trust managers and life insurers continued buying foreign equities.

Japanese investors reduced their exposure to overseas stocks in May, registering the largest net exit from foreign equities in roughly five years, official data show. The Ministry of Finance reported a net divestment of 2.72 trillion yen in foreign stocks during the month, marking the biggest monthly outflow since April 2021.

The selling pressure coincided with a decline in the MSCI World Index from a recent peak. The index had reached a record 1,138.3 last week but was down about 2.9% so far this month, a move that followed a strong U.S. jobs report and prompted profit-taking in high-flying, AI-linked technology shares.

Investors did not exit overseas markets altogether. Instead, the allocation shift favored foreign debt. Net purchases of foreign debt securities totaled 2.9 trillion yen in May, the largest monthly inflow into overseas bonds since May 2025.

The breakdown of flows across account types reveals different behavior within Japan’s investor base. Trust accounts were substantial sellers of foreign equities, offloading a net 3.38 trillion yen, while simultaneously increasing their holdings of overseas bonds by 3.16 trillion yen. In contrast, other institutional segments continued to support equity purchases abroad: investment trust management companies bought a net 614.6 billion yen of foreign stocks in the month, and life insurers added 77.5 billion yen.

Additional data from the Bank of Japan covering the first four months of this year show ongoing demand for specific regional equities. Japanese investors purchased 1.91 trillion yen of U.S. stocks and 826.4 billion yen of European stocks in that period. Purchases of British and Spanish equities amounted to 285.5 billion yen and 80.1 billion yen, respectively, over the same four-month span.

Taken together, the figures illustrate a rotation in overseas allocations during May - away from foreign equities overall and toward foreign fixed income - against a backdrop of geopolitical caution and a pullback in recent technology-led gains. ($1 = 160.2000 yen)


Data sources cited in this report:

  • Ministry of Finance net monthly flows for May
  • Bank of Japan purchases by region for January-April

Risks

  • Heightened caution over Middle East hostilities could sustain risk-off investor behavior, affecting demand for international equities - impacting global equity markets and financial institutions with international exposure.
  • Volatility stemming from a pullback in AI-linked technology stocks after a strong U.S. jobs report may lead to further equity outflows - particularly affecting the technology sector and funds concentrated in growth/AI names.
  • A shift from equities into bonds could pressure yields and asset allocation strategies, influencing fixed-income markets and portfolio managers focused on international diversification.

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