Japan's GPIF Unlikely to Increase Domestic Investment Until 2030 Review

According to Japan Times, Japan's Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) is unlikely to grant Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama's request to expand domestic investment, citing legal and governance constraints. Today (July 13), the fund confirmed it maintains its current allocation framework established in 2025, which distributes 25% each among domestic stocks, foreign stocks, domestic bonds, and foreign bonds, with the next regular review scheduled for 2030.

GPIF's legal mandate prioritizes long-term returns for pension beneficiaries over policy objectives. Over the past decade, overseas assets have consistently outperformed domestic ones in both equity and bond markets, making a domestic investment increase difficult to justify from an investment perspective. Diego Lopez, CEO of Global SWF, stated the Finance Ministry lacks authority to impose such demands, noting that unilateral pressure signals governance deficiency and conflicts of interest.

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