--- title: "Is Japan the ultimate winner of Halo trading?" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/277008121.md" description: "The AI revolution has made heavy asset, low elimination rate \"Halo transactions\" the focus of the market. Japanese companies, with their deep industrial foundation, full industry chain layout, and monopoly barriers in core semiconductor materials, have become a \"safe haven\" against technological shocks, ushering in a comprehensive revaluation of valuations and profit margins, and are expected to become the ultimate winners of this transaction" datetime: "2026-02-26T08:44:57.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/277008121.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277008121.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/277008121.md) --- # Is Japan the ultimate winner of Halo trading? Against the backdrop of the accelerating AI revolution, the investment strategy of seeking heavy asset, low elimination (Halo) companies is dominating the market, and the Japanese stock market is expected to become the ultimate winner of this trade. On February 26, Leo Lewis, head of the Financial Times' Tokyo bureau, wrote that the industry disruption brought about by AI has prompted investors to quickly adjust their portfolios in search of "non-losers" with risk resistance capabilities. Analysis indicates that **Japanese companies, once neglected by capital due to their heavy asset model, are now becoming a key safe haven for global investors to withstand technological shocks due to their unique industrial heritage and irreplaceable technological barriers.** According to a previous article from Wall Street View, Morgan Stanley believes that funds are currently shifting from a light asset narrative to "HALO" trading (heavy assets, low elimination), which involves allocating high-barrier, hard-to-replace physical capacities and networks (such as electricity, railways, etc.) to hedge against the uncertainties brought by AI. Notably, Leo Lewis believes that this trend is substantially reshaping the market's pricing logic for Japanese assets. As economies like the United States vigorously promote re-industrialization and respond to the enormous energy and infrastructure demands brought by AI, **Japanese companies, with their core position in key materials and high-end manufacturing supply chains, are experiencing significant margin expansion and a comprehensive revaluation.** ## Pricing Logic Reversal: From "Zombie Companies" to AI Safe Haven In the face of rapid changes triggered by AI, seeking investment with heavy asset, low elimination (Halo) characteristics has become the market focus. According to an article from Wall Street View, a report released by Goldman Sachs on February 24 pointed out that under the combination of higher real interest rates, geopolitical fragmentation, supply chain restructuring, and the wave of AI capital expenditure, the market is undergoing a "scarcity repricing." The leadership of the stock market is returning to tangible productive assets, and the market is beginning to reward capacity, networks, infrastructure, and engineering complexity, as these assets have extremely high replication costs and are not easily eliminated by technological iteration. Analysis indicates that this strategy aims to find companies that can withstand the wave of AI disruption. If investors further broaden their horizons to seek global assets whose valuations have not fully reflected their potential, the attractiveness of the Japanese stock market is particularly prominent. For a long time, the Japanese stock market has been neglected in the era dominated by light assets due to the prevalence of heavy asset companies. In the low or even negative interest rate period following the bubble burst in the 1980s, Japanese banks continued to provide debt extensions for traditional manufacturing, a practice that maintained so-called "zombie companies" and was severely criticized by the mainstream investment community. However, most of these companies engage in low-elimination niche businesses, possess unique equipment and extremely high industry barriers, and dominate many low-margin or overly complex fields, avoiding direct conflicts with other Asian competitors Strategist Pelham Smithers pointed out that **a large number of companies in the Japanese stock market, which traditionally have low returns on conventional metrics, are now becoming extremely attractive due to the unique impact of AI on the economics of manufacturing and the service industry's moat.** ## Industrial Foundation Revealed: Unexpected Dividends from Full Industry Chain Layout Leo Lewis noted in the article that in the past, Japan's practice of broadly covering multiple industrial sectors was often seen as a foolish and wasteful resource misallocation. According to calculations by Jefferies quantitative strategist Shrikant Kale, **Japanese companies are involved in an average of 2.3 industries, while their American and European counterparts are only involved in 1.5. In the U.S. and Europe, two-thirds of companies are purely single-business firms, while this ratio is only one-third in Japan.** However, it is precisely this seemingly unreasonable breadth that has preserved Japan's full industry chain industrial skills, which are highly sought after in today's global market. **The current re-industrialization process promoted by the U.S. is precisely aimed at filling the industrial gaps that Japan has refused to abandon. Institutions like Goldman Sachs believe that Japanese companies are ready to become highly attractive partners for U.S. industry.** Leo Lewis stated that the U.S. industrial sector is working to reconstruct a structure similar to Japan's existing industrial framework. A notable example is that under the U.S.-Japan tariff agreement, the largest investment project currently is a large gas turbine facility located in the U.S. This project aims to meet the enormous energy demands of AI, and its construction and operation will almost inevitably rely on Japanese machinery and technical support. **Wall Street Journal article** pointed out that **neither multinational oil pipelines nor national power grids can be easily replaced by code or digital innovation. Morgan Stanley's HALO basket (MSXXHALO) is built on this logic, covering seven structural pillars: materials, utilities, railroads, pipelines, waste management, defense, and signal towers.** ## Semiconductor Materials: Pricing Power Quietly Shifts It is noteworthy that the prosperity of the semiconductor industry is transmitting unprecedented pricing power upstream in the supply chain. Pelham Smithers stated that this pricing power has shifted to Japanese specialty materials manufacturers such as Mitsui Kinzoku, Nittobo, and Dowa. The products produced by these companies are indispensable links in the most advanced manufacturing processes, such as AI chips, and almost no other companies can fully replicate their technical specifications. **The monopolistic position in the supply chain brings direct financial returns.** Pelham Smithers added: > The market, which previously only scaled to a few million dollars, is rapidly expanding to the tens of billions level, and the profit margins of related companies are expected to soar from around 10% to over 25%. **As the supply chain bottlenecks that have not yet fully manifested gradually become exposed, the market will gain a deeper understanding of the control that Japanese Halo companies have at critical nodes.** However, the Halo trade is not without risks. This strategy essentially relies on the premise that AI disruption continues to deepen and that the direction of impact remains stable. **Once a new market narrative emerges or the development path of AI takes a turn, the Halo trade may quickly recede, and the "endorsement" gained by the Japanese market will also face re-examination.** While Japanese companies enjoy this moment, they should perhaps remain clear-headed. As Smithers stated, the Halo status of the Japanese stock market has been hard-won amid years of severe criticism—and that criticism could resurface at any time ### Related Stocks - [7914.JP](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/7914.JP.md) - [2626.JP](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/2626.JP.md) - [2641.JP](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/2641.JP.md) ## Related News & Research - [Kyodo Printing Unveils FY2026 Results and Strategy Focused on Corporate Value](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286520122.md) - [Imec’s Patrick Vandenameele: Full-stack Innovation Is the Name of the Game](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286875552.md) - [The Most Crowded Trade On Earth Is Cracking](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286808606.md) - [08:31 ETCollege Essay Advisors Introduces a More Personalized AI Platform to Help Students Go from a Blank Page to a Standout Essay](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286771590.md) - [Nexalin Acquires AI Health Platform Ahead Of HALO Clarity Pivotal Trial](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286923106.md)