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Nomura Global Research

                                     2011 Global Outlooks




                                                                    December 2010




Please read the important disclosures and analyst certifications on pp. 16-22. gl
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research




Hideyuki Takahashi
Head of Global Research
Senior Corporate Managing Director

 Thank you for your interest in Nomura research in 2010. Our global fixed
income and equity research teams have issued global outlook reports for
2011 covering macroeconomics, forex, equity strategy, inflation strategy, and
geopolitics. We have also put together distinctive 2011 outlook reports for
each region. We hope you will find the investment ideas presented in these
products useful. Nomura has endeavored to provide research spanning the
globe, and with the increasing globalization of financial markets, we think
research in tune with changes in global trends will be more important than
ever. We started up US fixed income research operations in 2009 and US
equity research in October 2010, completing our lineup of economic, forex,
equity, fixed income and quantitative analysis research. In 2011, Nomura
aims to have our researchers in each region cooperate across borders to
provide research highlighting new investment opportunities. Expect more
good things from Nomura research in the new year.




Michael Guarnieri
Global Head of Fixed Income Research




Paul Norris
Head of Global Equity Research




                    |1|
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


                            2011Global Outlooks


2011 Global Economic Outlook
               Rocky Road of Recovery
              The developed world recovery is set to stay muted due to ongoing de-leveraging,
              fiscal restraint and other crisis legacies. With better fundamentals and fewer
              aftermath issues, much of the emerging world, led by Asia, is set to keep growing
              briskly. Developed-world inflation should stay contained, but we see the ECB and
              BOE raising rates way ahead of the Fed and BOJ. We see inflationary pressures
              mounting in EM as funds keep flowing in and the authorities intervene to stem rising
              currencies. Downside risks: euro area fiscal crisis escalates and spreads; an
              investment pull-back in China; EM overheating turns sour. An upside surprise?:
              animal spirits stir and crisis-calibrated monetary policies help release pent-up
              developed world demand. We anticipate the US dollar consolidating in 2011 against
              other major currencies, but weakening against EM currencies.



2011 Global FX Outlook
               A global balancing act
              We believe the outlook for risky currencies is mildly positive for 2011. This
              assessment is based on a consistent historical pattern of returns during similar
              points in the cycle. The challenges are: 1) this view is buy-side consensus and we
              must be alert to overshooting in price and positioning (and we have a clear ‘value’
              focus in our recommendations below); 2) a sustained shift in Fed view (something
              we dispute); 3) that the notion of EM economic outperformance may be tested in
              2011 (we think markets will look beyond any temporary growth convergence); 4) EM
              economic outperformance, butting against continued US political pressures, may
              exacerbate tensions around global rebalancing in general and around CNY in
              particular; 5) Events in Europe, most critically Spain, threaten to upset risk markets.



2011 Global Equity Strategy Outlook
               Reducing the Risk Premium
              The 6% risk premium now embedded in global equities seems inappropriately high
              to us compared with current volatility and credit spreads, while implied growth rates
              look out of line with likely economic and earnings trends. We forecast earnings
              growth of 16% in 2011, and a total return of 20%. We expect asset allocators in
              developed economies to respond to the valuation gap that now exists between
              stocks and bonds. Regionally, we reduce exposure to emerging markets as policy
              tightening and an already heavy inflow of capital limit the scope for further asset
              price gains. We still expect positive returns in emerging markets. We increase
              exposure to Japanese and US equities because we think both regions will likely
              continue to benefit from loose monetary policy and the aforementioned asset shift,
              while equity valuations in Japan look especially appealing. If stock prices and bond
              yields rise, Financials should outperform, while sectors that can grow organically
              should also do well.
                                         |2|
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


                             2011 Global Outlooks


2011 Global Fixed Income Strategy Outlook
               Four Macro Themes for 2011
               One of the golden rules of year-ahead articles is to begin with a healthy dose of
               humility. To be fair, many of our core themes in 2010 fared well. We were bullish G4
               rates, which at the start of the year was a highly unpopular view. We believed
               decoupling between large developed economies and China and its large trading
               partners would be a definitive trade in 2010 – and we stuck with the trade despite
               the substantial shock to risk appetite during Europe’s debt crisis. We expected
               continued loose G4 monetary policy to be supportive of carry trades, especially in
               short-end interest rates – our systematic taking of that carry risk was one of the
               more underappreciated trades of 2010.




2011 Global Inflation Outlook
                Reality Check
              We stress test the vision of a world where inflation never occurs again. There is no
              need to expect hyper-inflation (and we don’t) to find inflation markets complacent.
              Inflation markets have experienced highly distinct periods over the past three years,
              from concerns about an inflation spiral up to summer 2008 (remember the inflation
              caps?), a more balanced scenario in 2009, moving to deflation concerns in the
              middle of 2010 (remember deflation floors?) and recovering somewhat since then.
              As of the end of 2010, we appear to be in a transition period. But we see current
              valuations as low against fundamentals: despite all the headwinds, the economy is
              in a recovery phase, upside pressures are mounting while deflationary forces are
              diminishing. So 2011 should be a reasonably strong year for inflation valuations,
              something closer to 2009 than 2010.



2011 Global Geopolitics Outlook
               Politics Remain Pivotal Even as Risk Aversion Recedes
               Politics and policy will continue to be key drivers of market sentiment as
               governments move forward in 2011 with exit strategies from the financial crisis.
               Generic issues where policy decisions stand to play a particularly important role
               include the management of capital inflows and food price inflation. Decisions in the
               United States – ranging from fiscal policy to relations with China – stand to be the
               main focus of markets. Sovereign debt issues could yet pull market attention back to
               the eurozone, although a repeat of the 2010 crisis is, in our view, unlikely. We expect
               the coalition government in the United Kingdom to survive potentially difficult local
               elections and a referendum set for 5 May 2011. In the Middle East, a number of
               issues stand to fuel tensions locally, but we see only a low probability of a major
               global shock emanating from the region in the next 12 months, eg, an Israeli military
               strike against Iran. We expect China to continue a smooth trajectory towards the
               handover of power to the 5th Generation leadership in 2012-13.

                                          |3|
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


             2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks


2011 European Economic Outlook
               Finding the balance
              Policymakers in Europe need to strike a balance between different policy options.
              That potentially leaves even more scope than usual for policy errors. The sovereign
              debt crisis is the issue that has dominated the thinking of European policymakers
              over 2010 and will no doubt continue to do so in the year ahead. Periphery
              governments must continue with their programme of fiscal austerity and structural
              reform. Too much tightening runs the risk of economic stagnation or political
              opposition which could render it unfeasible, losing the confidence of markets and
              official backers; too little and markets lose confidence anyway.




2011 EEMEA Economic Outlook
               A Postmodern World
              Structural changes, combined with cyclical trends, are leading EEMEA policymakers
              to adopt new strategies to cope with shifting global growth, rising inflation and
              increased fiscal scrutiny.

              Postmodernism: A style and concept characterized by distrust of theories and
              ideologies, and by the drawing of attention to conventions, Oxford English
              dictionary.




2011 European Equity Strategy Outlook
               Reasons for reinvestment
              A key reason behind the low multiples attached to European stocks is the lack of
              organic growth. However, with high rates of profitability on existing capital, a very
              low cost of debt, continued economic recovery and indications that investors are
              rewarding more proactive deployment of cash flows – CEOs are likely to increase
              organic investment as well as M&A. We forecast a 13% gain for European equities
              in 2011. We are biased towards sectors that benefit from rising stock markets and
              lower risk premiums, and prefer ‘B to B’ over ‘B to C’. We do not want to ‘pay-up’ for
              defensive exposure, therefore we overweight Financials, Tech and Media, and
              underweight Utilities, Consumer Staples and Consumer Cyclicals. We downgrade
              exposure to both Healthcare and Telecom, while adding to Industrials and
              Financials.




                                         |4|
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


              2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks


2011 European Media Outlook
                Investment-driven growth, accretive acquisitions and
               M&A
               2010 has produced some upside surprises from the early cyclical advertising
               exposed stocks. There may still be scope for further cyclical gains, but the power to
               shock is reduced. Earnings upgrades will have to be generated by internal
               investment in organic growth initiatives and accretive acquisitions. Our top picks for
               internally generated growth are Reed Elsevier (which has raised investment levels,
               in growth markets), Telenet and Eutelsat. As well as making accretive acquisitions,
               some media companies could become M&A targets in 2011. BSkyB is our top pick
               on M&A grounds and a bid of 800p+ could come as early as Q1.




2011 Asia FX Outlook
                Capital flows, growth ebbs
               We identify the following key themes driving Asia FX into 2011:
               1. Capital inflows into EM and particularly Asia;
               2. Asian central banks implementing more capital controls;
               3. The impact of capital controls and the risks of an FX policy shift towards allowing
               appreciation;
               4. CNY appreciation; and
               5. Relative Asia growth outperformance, but risks of growth slowing.




2011 Asian interest rate strategy Outlook
                History rhymes
               We retain a positive view on Asian interest rate markets into 2011. Our view is
               underpinned by several factors: 1) an ongoing regional economic slowdown; 2) our
               assumption that there will be less pass-through of high commodity prices to
               underlying inflation than the market believes; 3) the changed reaction function of
               regional central banks who are less inclined to tighten policy into a commodity
               price-driven rise in headline inflation than they were in 2007-08; 4) regulatory
               changes in the global banking, insurance and pension industries, which are spurring
               demand for duration; and 5) a bias among regional policy makers to tighten
               monetary conditions via exchange rates rather than interest rates.




                                          |5|
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


              2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks


2011 Asia Pacific Equity Strategy Outlook
               Deflation, inflation and the return of the productive
              economy
              We expect global equities to deliver positive returns as funds move away from
              bonds as growth fears subside. Asian equities should benefit from rising domestic
              consumption, real negative interest rates, wealth effects and growing bi-lateral trade
              between EM. Asian authorities continue to prioritise growth over inflation. We
              upgrade Taiwan on better global growth prospects. We expect companies
              demonstrating better competitiveness and beneficiaries of productivity gains to
              outperform. We highlight them below. We view 2011 as the start of the world's
              population shifting from favourable demographics to an aging society. This is also
              passing through Asia from Japan, Korea and Taiwan. The world’s aging comes at a
              time when China has reached the 'Lewis' point — it has run out of cheap labour.
              Wage costs in Asia are rising quickly.



2011 Asia Pacific Quantitative Outlook
                Productivity factor for extra juice
              Productivity and competitiveness, as well as the ability of companies to manage
              costs, sustain capital spending and grow market share, will likely be key return
              drivers in 2011. In terms of styles in Asia, we suggest adding exposure to the
              composite productivity factor in 2011 and continue to emphasise momentum and
              growth over value. We present our suggested quant screen approach in 2011.




2011 China Equity Strategy Outlook
                Higher ground
              We believe solid earnings growth (21%+ y-y), sufficient liquidity (+18% y-y M2
              growth) and undemanding valuations (in line with historical average forward P/E of
              12.6x) will support 20%-plus upside in China’s equity market in 2011. Against a
              likely backdrop of surging inflation, interest hikes, RMB appreciation, the 12th FYP
              and rising global commodity prices, we spell out our sector winners/losers for 2011.
              We are Bullish on Financials, Property, Consumer, Oil & gas and Online gaming.
              Near-term concern over inflation will weigh on equity market performance. But amid
              tightening monetary policy and price control efforts, any share price weakness
              should present buying opportunities for long-term gains.




                                         |6|
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


             2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks


2011 Korea Equity Strategy Outlook
               Land of the investing calm
              We expect Kospi earnings to rise 15% in 2011. Our market year-end target is 2230,
              with a fair risk premium of 6.7%. Unlike 2010, Korean equities are entering 2011 with
              no signs of overheating. The global economy has avoided a double dip, valuations
              remain inexpensive, while liquidity conditions and sentiment are favourable. We
              prefer those stocks benefiting from rising commodity prices. BoK rate hikes have
              been much slower than expected, despite current account surpluses having reached
              a record high, resulting in loose monetary conditions and excess liquidity. A highly
              leveraged household, subdued property prices and a strengthening won are
              delaying aggressive monetary policy tightening, and has helped sentiment on Korea
              equities. We see Korea as is a key beneficiary of emerging market growth.



2011 Singapore Equity Strategy Outlook
               Riding the reflation cycle in 2011
              We see 10 to 15% market returns in Singapore in 2011, underpinned by attractive
              valuations, favourable liquidity conditions and a strong S$. Macro and industry
              drivers underpin our positive stance towards banks (attractive valuations),
              commodities (food inflation), offshore marine (capex cycle) and commercial
              property (cyclical upswing). A strong currency, reasonable valuations and available
              policy flexibility (strong fiscal position) support Singapore’s market outlook in 2011.
              Moderation in exports due to a stronger S$ is consistent with our view of slower but
              more sustainable GDP growth going into 2011. Greater cooperation within ASEAN
              to improve trade and FDI across ASEAN, while better Singapore-Malaysia relations
              could accelerate cross-border investments.



2011 Malaysia Equity Strategy Outlook
               The rally is still young
              Most of the characteristics of the super bull market in the early 1990s have
              resurfaced, with five key features clearly apparent: economic recovery, liquidity,
              sector rotational plays, M&A activity and rising retail participation. The excitement
              infused by the ongoing flurry of M&A activity in three different sectors can only be
              positive for market sentiment, not to mention for investment banking earnings. Set
              against a favourable backdrop of — 1) an ongoing consumption boom, driven by a
              younger and wealthier population; 2) improving commodity prices; and 3) ample
              liquidity supporting asset reflation evident in the buoyant property market — the bull
              market in Malaysia looks set to continue into 2011. Going into the New Year, we
              believe the property, palm oil and bank sectors will be the winners.




                                          |7|
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


             2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks


2011 India Equity Strategy Outlook
               Under the weather
              We expect 2011 to be a year of below-average returns for the market and set our
              December 2011 Sensex target at 22,100, implying a potential return of around
              12%. We see downside risk to the 20% y-y earnings growth in FY12F now being
              priced in by consensus. We believe this, combined with a likely tightening of the
              policy environment, could restrict premium expansion for equities. The factors that
              could dominate policy are the strength of consumer demand and inflation. Global
              commodity prices will likely be key in determining the evolution of inflation,
              the current account and policy action.




2011 Japan Equity Strategy Outlook
               An end to collective pessimism
              1. We think Japanese equities are likely to outperform global equities in 2011.
              2. We expect support from improvement in Japanese equities’ relative valuations,
                 firming earnings momentum, and the BOJ's monetary policy stance.
              3. Our end-2011 TOPIX target is 1,100.
              4. As key stock-selection themes we see: (1) a steepening of the JGB yield curve;
                 (2) ongoing rapid growth and rising inflation rates in emerging economies, and
                 related strengthening of their currencies; (3) Japanese companies’ use of
                 accumulated cash to increase shareholder returns and fund capital investment
                 and M&As; and (4) improvement in the inventory-shipment balance in the
                 electronic parts and devices sector.
              5. We recommend overweighting the financials, housing/real estate, machinery, and
               electrical machinery/precision equipment sectors.



2011 Japan Economic Outlook
               We expect Japan to break out of its lull in 2011, led by
              exports
              We have made revisions to our economic outlook for FY10–FY12 following the
              announcement of second preliminary real GDP estimates for 2010 Q3. Reflecting
              retroactive revisions to figures, we have raised our FY10 forecast for real GDP
              growth from 2.7% to 3.3%. We maintain our growth forecasts of 1.2% for FY11 and
              2.1% for FY12. We expect the Japanese economy to perform weakly in the near
              term, but we maintain our outlook for Japan to break out of its economic lull in 2011
              H2, led by exports.




                                         |8|
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


             2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks


2011 US Rates Outlook
               Calibrating the Rates Compass
              The recent movements in the bond market have a similar look and feel to what took
              place during December 2009. The market went on to trade better in the first few
              weeks of 2010 only to fade up to higher yields. A repeat of that sort of trading
              experience could be indeed what is ahead at the start of 2011. However, what is
              different now in our minds is that we believe investors will continue to “sell into
              strength” whereas in the latter half of 2010 they would “buy into strength.” We
              therefore maintain an overall bearish bias and see rates trading at the higher end of
              our basline core view of 2.35% to 3.60% in 1H11. This range of 125 bps compares
              to the 160 bps of 2010. We believe that as economic variability declines, that overall
              rate movements will also contract.



2011 Securitized Products Outlook
               Navigating the Maze of Options
              Agency MBS had started the year 2010 on a nervous note as MBS spreads were
              very tight and the market was worried about the likely widening of spreads once the
              Fed concluded its MBS purchase program in 1Q‘10. Although agency MBS spreads
              held up pretty well for about 3-4 months after the Fed‘s purchase program was
              completed, the spread between the current coupon MBS yield and the average yield
              of 5-year and 10-year Treasuries had widened by close to 40bp from the historical
              tights hit in July’10.




2011 Non-agency MBS Market Outlook
               Review of 2010 and Key Themes for 2011
              Outlook for housing and loan modifications: Our base case forecast is that national
              home prices will drop 5% in 2011 driven by distressed inventory liquidations and
              demographic trends. We present our outlook for modification activity going forward
              Mortgage Credit Performance: We present our outlook for liquidation timelines,
              severities, credit burnout, prepayments, and overall default and loss projections.
              Supply and Demand Technicals: The technical backdrop should remain very strong
              for nonagency RMBS given expectations for limited new issue supply and the
              potential reinvestment demand from paydowns. Recommended positioning in the
              RMBS market for 2011: We maintain an overweight bias on the overall non-agency
              sector, and recommend buying recent vintage SSNR option ARM bonds, SSNR dirty
              prime/cleaner Alt-A fixed-rate collateral, and longer duration subprime seasoned
              mezzanine bonds.




                                         |9|
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


            2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks


2011 GNMA Market Outlook
              Navigating the Maze of Options
             We think that a combination of the tightening of FHA underwriting standards and
             higher insurance fees will lead to a relatively higher percentage of loans being
             insured through private mortgage insurance in 2011. Further, the surge in home
             sales in the sub-$200k price segment due to tax credits has subsided. This, coupled
             with lower conventional to FHA refinancing, should lead to lower GNMA net
             issuance in 2011. Overall, we expect gross issuance of GNMA MBS to decline from
             $363bn in 2010 to $282bn in 2011 and the net issuance to decline from $182bn in
             2010 to $134bn in 2011.



2011 Auto ABS Market Outlook
              Our main investment recommendation
             Auto ABS was a solid performer in 2010 amid robust issuance and range bound
             spreads. Issuance of auto floorplan and subprime ABS saw a significant uptick while
             prime loans and leases were down. GM’s purchase of AmeriCredit changes the
             captive issuer landscape, and we anticipate the new General Motors Financial to
             ramp up its near-prime and lease offerings in 2011. While credit enhancement
             decreased compared to 2009, mitigating factors help maintain credit protection, and
             we believe bonds are adequately enhanced as structures de-lever quickly. Auto
             collateral performance remains strong: early credit metrics show that 2010 vintage is
             performing on par with 2009 and better than 2007 and 2008, while recoveries have
             benefitted from a strong used car market.



2011 CMBS Market Outlook
              Key Themes in the CMBS Market
             Property Fundamentals: As the economy slowly recovers, occupancy and rents at
             commercial properties are starting to rebound. However, because of the steep drop
             in occupancy levels during the previous recession, net operating income will
             continue to be weak across all property types through 2011, resulting in a steady
             stream of new delinquencies. Commercial Property Prices: Commercial property
             prices are likely to continue bouncing along the bottom as more distressed assets hit
             the market, while stronger trophy assets garner increased investor interest.
             Maturities: Although the $38bn in loans set to mature in 2011 have a weaker profile
             than those that matured in 2010, they will benefit from increased credit availability
             and investor appetite. We expect that 60% of loans coming due will be able to
             refinance, while another 10% will receive a maturity date extension.




                                       | 10 |
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


              2011 Global Collaboration -Running Themes


The coming surge in food prices
                Global Economics and Strategy
               Even with lacklustre growth in advanced economies, another multiyear surge in food
               prices is likely given rapidly growing demand for food in the developing world,
               constraints and uncertainties surrounding food supply and the development of
               increasingly powerful feedback loops. We construct a Nomura Food Vulnerability
               Index for 80 countries. We also discuss: Macro implications, trading
               recommendations from our fixed income and equity strategy teams and specific
               stock ideas.




The case for capital controls in Asia
                Asia Special Report –Global Economics
               Under certain conditions, capital controls can be a legitimate policy response to
               surging inflows, but they are no panacea. In this Special Report we draw on a
               scorecard approach and our country specialists to assess which countries in the
               region are most likely to impose controls. Free-flowing foreign capital is no doubt
               beneficial to the world economy, but the experience in emerging economies is that
               sudden surges can fuel asset bubbles and, if the inflows suddenly reverse, a high
               risk of financial crisis. Asian policymakers raised this concern at the recent
               IMF-World Bank annual meetings, and for good reason: the growth rates and
               interest rates of Asian economies are now so much higher than those of the
               advanced economies.



Machinery China
                No barriers
               We believe rising labour costs, an improving product mix and gradually increasing
               pricing power will bring the limelight back to strong growth in the machinery sector.
               We would advise investors to focus on excavators and concrete machinery: these
               should be 2011’s fastest growing segments. SANY, Zoomlion and Komatsu are our
               top BUYs on this basis. With listed China exposure still limited to HKSE, we also
               recommend Japanese suppliers Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Toshiba Machine and
               Nabtesco. Possible negative growth in March 2011 could hurt share prices, while
               strong volume growth from 2Q and onwards should support share-price
               appreciation. We expect rising mechanisation in China as a consequence of labour
               cost increases. Chinese construction machinery makers will likely become more
               competitive due to strong growth of the domestic market, improving product quality
               and technology level.



                                         | 11 |
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


              2011 Global Collaboration -Running Themes


Global Memory
                A new direction
               We are in the middle of a megatrend – the rise of tablets and smartphones. While
               we think this will dent DRAM demand in the short term, we believe it will benefit the
               overall memory industry substantially in terms of earnings for several years to
               come. Samsung Electronics is best prepared for this transition, in our view, and our
               top pick. We are also BUYers of Hynix and Toshiba. The share prices of memory
               names move in tandem with memory prices. With the bottom of the memory market
               in sight, we see memory share prices likely to gather momentum soon.




Global Mobile Phone trends
                Android momentum drives…
               We expect 2011 handset market trends to follow 2010 patterns, but with an
               increasing shift to mid-range smartphones, with low-end smartphones key to growth
               in 2012. The industry shift is continuing, with Apple and Android likely to hold a 50%
               revenue share in 2012, at the expense of Nokia and RIM. In conjunction with a
               number of company reports published today (HTC, Motorola, RIM and ZTE), we are
               updating our forecasts for the global handset market. On a like-for-like basis, our
               handset unit estimates show an increase from 11% to 16% in 2010, from 9% to 11%
               in 2011 and from 7% to 10% in 2012. Our handset market revenue forecasts
               increase to 13% in 2010, from 9% and to 11% from 9% in 2011. Full details are
               shown in the table below.



Smart Grids
                IT for electric power networks—a new global
                battleground
               Smart grid investment is likely to be substantial over a long time frame, but given the
               ongoing technology standardization and various types of testing, it could take
               several years to get fully under way, except in areas such as advanced metering
               infrastructure (AMI). We accordingly see two groups of smart grid-related
               companies: those with strong short-term earnings growth potential and those with
               attractive longer-term strategies.




                                          | 12 |
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


               2011 Global Collaboration -Running Themes


LED lighting
                 Change spurred by demand shift from TVs to lighting
                Demand for LEDs used in TVs has not grown as much as previously anticipated, but
                we think demand for LEDs used in general lighting has gotten off to a solid start. As
                demand shifts to general lighting LEDs, which require high-variety, small-quantity
                production, from TV LEDs, which require low-variety, mass production, we think
                competitive factors in all facets of the value chain could change. We previously
                believed that the LED lighting market would take off in earnest during 2010 through
                2011 (refer to Report no. 10-121, LED lighting: The final—and biggest—LED
                application coming to prominence, issued 26 March 2010).




Cosmetics in China
                 C-Bons integration to boost Beiersdorf’s top line and
                margins
                In this report, we take a close look at the Chinese cosmetics market and try to
                assess the relative strengths and weaknesses of the companies under our
                coverage. With China expected to become the largest cosmetics market in the world
                over the next 15 years (#3 today) and already representing the primary engine of
                growth for the sector, we see companies with clear and durable competitive
                advantages in the region as well positioned to deliver superior medium-term
                earnings growth at a group level. We believe the market has been too focused on
                one number – the proportion of total sales derived from China.




China Auto and auto parts
                 Passengers in front
                Auto sales in China are set to expand by 28% to 17.5mn units in 2010F, following
                46% growth in 2009. Sales have been underpinned by favourable government
                policies, momentum inland, and fundamental demand backed by rising personal
                wealth. We believe there is plenty of gas left in the tank. Our forecasts call for 15%
                growth in 2011F to 20mn, driven by inland demand (favouring small cars) and
                replacement demand (upward shift in product mix). We look for continued
                momentum in passenger cars, taking sales to 12.8mn (up 16.4%). Prices should
                stay strong in 2011F, with industry utilization remaining above 80% amid a modest
                15% forecast rise in capacity to 15mn.




                                           | 13 |
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research


             2011 Global Collaboration -Running Themes


Rail equipment
                 Rail on a growth track: next stops Russia and India
              Both Russia and India have over EUR 200bn of railway development planned,
              although financing is not yet fully ringfenced: Mainline, freight and high-speed
              development is starting. While both countries are more open markets than China,
              we think that localisation and partnerships will be key to accessing these markets.
              Solid rail equipment demand forecast by Unife: global growth of 2.3% for 2008-15.
              Faster growth of 4% likely for 2010-15. LatAm, Middle East and Africa, and CIS
              regions are all forecast to grow fastest at around 4.5% pa to 2015. Europe to grow at
              a steady 2.2% pa on the back of signalling, services and fleet renewal demand, Asia
              slowing to 1.3% owing to expected completion of China's high-speed build-out.



EUVL poised for mass production
               Japanese          lithography equipment                   industry facing
              extinction
              Extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUVL) is fast emerging as the main candidate to be
              the next generation in semiconductor lithography technologies. Even companies
              that had previously viewed double patterning technology (DPT), a technique that
              allows existing light sources to continue to be used, as the main candidate have
              been substantially veering toward EUVL for mass production. While we think EUVL
              will be the mainstream mass production technology in five years’ time, we see risks
              in basing opinions of companies on changes in lithography technology five years
              out.




Global capital goods: demand and competition in China
               Japanese/European                  companies           strong         in     core
              parts/services
              Chinese manufacturers are expanding production and increasing sophistication.
              Sharply rising labor costs have motivated company managers to invest in factory
              automation (FA), while the accompanying rise in personal incomes is spurring sales
              of autos and electronics. These factors are combining to create a virtuous cycle
              beneficial to machinery demand. We expect Japanese and European companies to
              maintain their technological edge in core components, especially for FA.




                                        | 14 |
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research




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Any Authors named on this report are Research Analysts unless otherwise
indicated
Analyst Certification
Each research analyst identified herein certifies that all of the views expressed in this report by such analyst accurately

reflect his or her personal views about the subject securities and issuers. In addition, each research analyst identified on

the cover page hereof hereby certifies that no part of his or her compensation was, is, or will be, directly or indirectly related

to the specific recommendations or views that he or she has expressed in this research report, nor is it tied to any specific

investment banking transactions performed by Nomura Securities International, Inc., Nomura International plc or any other

Nomura Group company.




Important Disclosures
Conflict-of-interest disclosures
Important        disclosures         may         be        accessed          through         the        following        website:

http://www.nomura.com/research/pages/disclosures/disclosures.aspx . If you have difficulty with this site or you do not have a

password, please contact your Nomura Securities International, Inc. salesperson (1-877-865-5752) or email

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Online availability of research and additional conflict-of-interest disclosures
Nomura Japanese Equity Research is available electronically for clients in the US on NOMURA.COM, REUTERS,

BLOOMBERG and THOMSON ONE ANALYTICS. For clients in Europe, Japan and elsewhere in Asia it is available on

NOMURA.COM, REUTERS and BLOOMBERG.

Important disclosures may be accessed through the left hand side of the Nomura Disclosure web page

http://www.nomura.com/research or requested from Nomura Securities International, Inc., on 1-877-865-5752. If you have any

difficulties with the website, please email grpsupport-eu@nomura.com for technical assistance.



The analysts responsible for preparing this report have received compensation based upon various factors including the

firm's total revenues, a portion of which is generated by Investment Banking activities.



Industry Specialists identified in some Nomura International plc research reports are employees within the Firm who are

responsible for the sales and trading effort in the sector for which they have coverage. Industry Specialists do not contribute

in any manner to the content of research report in which their names appear.



Distribution of ratings (Global)
Nomura Global Equity Research has 1878 companies under coverage.

48% have been assigned a Buy rating which, for purposes of mandatory disclosures, are classified as a Buy rating; 41% of

companies with this rating are investment banking clients of the Nomura Group*.

37% have been assigned a Neutral rating which, for purposes of mandatory disclosures, is classified as a Hold rating; 54%

of companies with this rating are investment banking clients of the Nomura Group*.

13% have been assigned a Reduce rating which, for purposes of mandatory disclosures, are classified as a Sell rating;

16% of companies with this rating are investment banking clients of the Nomura Group*.


                                                                    | 16 |
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research
As at 30 September 2010.

*The Nomura Group as defined in the Disclaimer section at the end of this report.



Explanation of Nomura's equity research rating system in Europe, Middle East and Africa, US and

Latin America for ratings published from 27 October 2008
The rating system is a relative system indicating expected performance against a specific benchmark identified for each

individual stock. Analysts may also indicate absolute upside to price target defined as (fair value - current price)/current

price, subject to limited management discretion. In most cases, the fair value will equal the analyst's assessment of the

current intrinsic fair value of the stock using an appropriate valuation methodology such as discounted cash flow or multiple

analysis, etc.



STOCKS

A rating of 'Buy', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to outperform the Benchmark over the next 12 months.

A rating of 'Neutral', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to perform in line with the Benchmark over the next 12

months.

A rating of 'Reduce', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to underperform the Benchmark over the next 12 months.

A rating of 'RS-Rating Suspended', indicates that the rating and target price have been suspended temporarily to comply

with applicable regulations and/or firm policies in certain circumstances including when Nomura is acting in an advisory

capacity in a merger or strategic transaction involving the company.

Benchmarks are as follows: United States/Europe: Please see valuation methodologies for explanations of relevant

benchmarks       for   stocks   (accessible   through   the   left   hand   side   of   the   Nomura   Disclosure   web   page:

http://www.nomura.com/research);Global Emerging Markets (ex-Asia): MSCI Emerging Markets ex-Asia, unless otherwise

stated in the valuation methodology.



SECTORS

A 'Bullish' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to outperform the Benchmark during the next 12 months.

A 'Neutral' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to perform in line with the Benchmark during the next 12

months.

A 'Bearish' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to underperform the Benchmark during the next 12

months.

Benchmarks are as follows: United States: S&P 500; Europe: Dow Jones STOXX 600; Global Emerging Markets

(ex-Asia): MSCI Emerging Markets ex-Asia.



Explanation of Nomura's equity research rating system for Asian companies under coverage ex

Japan published from 30 October 2008 and in Japan from 6 January 2009
STOCKS

Stock recommendations are based on absolute valuation upside (downside), which is defined as (Price Target - Current

Price) / Current Price, subject to limited management discretion. In most cases, the Price Target will equal the analyst's

12-month intrinsic valuation of the stock, based on an appropriate valuation methodology such as discounted cash flow,

multiple analysis, etc.

A 'Buy' recommendation indicates that potential upside is 15% or more.

A 'Neutral' recommendation indicates that potential upside is less than 15% or downside is less than 5%.

                                                                      | 17 |
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research
A 'Reduce' recommendation indicates that potential downside is 5% or more.

A rating of 'RS' or 'Rating Suspended' indicates that the rating and target price have been suspended temporarily to

comply with applicable regulations and/or firm policies in certain circumstances including when Nomura is acting in an

advisory capacity in a merger or strategic transaction involving the subject company.

Securities and/or companies that are labelled as 'Not rated' or shown as 'No rating' are not in regular research coverage

of the Nomura entity identified in the top banner. Investors should not expect continuing or additional information from

Nomura relating to such securities and/or companies.



SECTORS

A 'Bullish' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under

coverage is) a positive absolute recommendation.

A 'Neutral' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under

coverage is) a neutral absolute recommendation.

A 'Bearish' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under

coverage is) a negative absolute recommendation.



Explanation of Nomura's equity research rating system in Japan published prior to 6 January 2009

(and ratings in Europe, Middle East and Africa, US and Latin America published prior to 27 October

2008)
STOCKS

A rating of '1' or 'Strong buy', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to outperform the Benchmark by 15% or more

over the next six months.

A rating of '2' or 'Buy', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to outperform the Benchmark by 5% or more but less

than 15% over the next six months.

A rating of '3' or 'Neutral', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to either outperform or underperform the Benchmark

by less than 5% over the next six months.

A rating of '4' or 'Reduce', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to underperform the Benchmark by 5% or more but

less than 15% over the next six months.

A rating of '5' or 'Sell', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to underperform the Benchmark by 15% or more over the

next six months.

Stocks labeled 'Not rated' or shown as 'No rating' are not in Nomura's regular research coverage. Nomura might not

publish additional research reports concerning this company, and it undertakes no obligation to update the analysis,

estimates, projections, conclusions or other information contained herein.



SECTORS

A 'Bullish' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to outperform the Benchmark during the next six months.

A 'Neutral' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to perform in line with the Benchmark during the next six

months.

A 'Bearish' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to underperform the Benchmark during the next six

months.

Benchmarks are as follows: Japan: TOPIX; United States: S&P 500, MSCI World Technology Hardware & Equipment;

Europe, by sector - Hardware/Semiconductors: FTSE W Europe IT Hardware; Telecoms: FTSE W Europe Business

                                                                  | 18 |
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research
Services; Business Services: FTSE W Europe; Auto & Components: FTSE W Europe Auto & Parts; Communications

equipment: FTSE W Europe IT Hardware; Ecology Focus: Bloomberg World Energy Alternate Sources; Global Emerging

Markets: MSCI Emerging Markets ex-Asia.



Explanation of Nomura's equity research rating system for Asian companies under coverage ex

Japan published prior to 30 October 2008
STOCKS

Stock recommendations are based on absolute valuation upside (downside), which is defined as (Fair Value - Current

Price)/Current Price, subject to limited management discretion. In most cases, the Fair Value will equal the analyst's

assessment of the current intrinsic fair value of the stock using an appropriate valuation methodology such as Discounted

Cash Flow or Multiple analysis etc. However, if the analyst doesn't think the market will revalue the stock over the specified

time horizon due to a lack of events or catalysts, then the fair value may differ from the intrinsic fair value. In most cases,

therefore, our recommendation is an assessment of the difference between current market price and our estimate of

current intrinsic fair value. Recommendations are set with a 6-12 month horizon unless specified otherwise. Accordingly,

within this horizon, price volatility may cause the actual upside or downside based on the prevailing market price to differ

from the upside or downside implied by the recommendation.

A 'Strong buy' recommendation indicates that upside is more than 20%.

A 'Buy' recommendation indicates that upside is between 10% and 20%.

A 'Neutral' recommendation indicates that upside or downside is less than 10%.

A 'Reduce' recommendation indicates that downside is between 10% and 20%.

A 'Sell' recommendation indicates that downside is more than 20%.



SECTORS

A 'Bullish' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under

coverage is) a positive absolute recommendation.

A 'Neutral' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under

coverage is) a neutral absolute recommendation.

A 'Bearish' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under

coverage is) a negative absolute recommendation.



Price targets
Price targets, if discussed, reflect in part the analyst's estimates for the company's earnings. The achievement of any price

target may be impeded by general market and macroeconomic trends, and by other risks related to the company or the

market, and may not occur if the company's earnings differ from estimates.



Disclaimers
This publication contains material that has been prepared by the Nomura entity identified on the banner at the top or the

bottom of page 1 herein and, if applicable, with the contributions of one or more Nomura entities whose employees and

their respective affiliations are specified on page 1 herein or elsewhere identified in the publication. Affiliates and

subsidiaries of Nomura Holdings, Inc. (collectively, the 'Nomura Group'), include: Nomura Securities Co., Ltd. ('NSC') Tokyo,

Japan; Nomura International plc, United Kingdom; Nomura Securities International, Inc. ('NSI'), New York, NY; Nomura

International (Hong Kong) Ltd., Hong Kong; Nomura Financial Investment (Korea) Co., Ltd., Korea (Information on Nomura

                                                                   | 19 |
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research
analysts registered with the Korea Financial Investment Association ('KOFIA') can be found on the KOFIA Intranet at

http://dis.kofia.or.kr ); Nomura Singapore Ltd., Singapore (Registration number 197201440E, regulated by the Monetary

Authority of Singapore); Nomura Securities Singapore Pte Ltd., Singapore (Registration number 198702521E, regulated by

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Private Limited, Mumbai, India (Registered Address: Ceejay House, Level 11, Plot F, Shivsagar Estate, Dr. Annie Besant

Road, Worli, Mumbai- 400 018, India; SEBI Registration No: BSE INB011299030, NSE INB231299034, INF231299034,

INE 231299034).



THIS MATERIAL IS: (I) FOR YOUR PRIVATE INFORMATION, AND WE ARE NOT SOLICITING ANY ACTION BASED

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Opinions expressed are current opinions as of the original publication date appearing on this material only and the

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update this publication. If and as applicable, NSI's investment banking relationships, investment banking and

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United States'), if any, are specified in disclaimers and related disclosures in this report. In addition, other members of the

Nomura Group may from time to time perform investment banking or other services (including acting as advisor, manager

or lender) for, or solicit investment banking or other business from, companies mentioned herein. Further, the Nomura

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issuance of this material may, to the extent permitted by applicable law and/or regulation, have long or short positions in,

and buy or sell, the securities (including ownership by NSI, referenced above), or derivatives (including options) thereof, of

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a market maker and principal, willing to buy and sell certain of the securities of companies mentioned herein. Further, the

Nomura Group may buy and sell certain of the securities of companies mentioned herein, as agent for its clients.

Investors should consider this report as only a single factor in making their investment decision and, as such, the report

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decision. Please see the further disclaimers in the disclosure information on companies covered by Nomura analysts

available at www.nomura.com/research under the 'Disclosure' tab. Nomura Group produces a number of different types of

research product including, among others, fundamental analysis, quantitative analysis and short term trading ideas;

recommendations contained in one type of research product may differ from recommendations contained in other types of

                                                                   | 20 |
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research
research product, whether as a result of differing time horizons, methodologies or otherwise; it is possible that individual

employees of Nomura may have different perspectives to this publication.

NSC and other non-US members of the Nomura Group (i.e. excluding NSI), their officers, directors and employees may, to

the extent it relates to non-US issuers and is permitted by applicable law, have acted upon or used this material prior to, or

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Foreign-currency-denominated securities are subject to fluctuations in exchange rates that could have an adverse effect on

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of which are influenced by foreign currencies, effectively assume currency risk.

The securities described herein may not have been registered under the US Securities Act of 1933, and, in such case, may

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securities mentioned in this material.

This publication has been approved for distribution in the United Kingdom and European Union as investment research by

Nomura International plc ('NIPlc'), which is authorized and regulated by the UK Financial Services Authority ('FSA') and is a

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                                                                    | 21 |
2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research
No part of this material may be (i) copied, photocopied, or duplicated in any form, by any means; or (ii) redistributed without

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NIPlc and other Nomura Group entities manage conflicts identified through the following: their Chinese Wall, confidentiality

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Disclosure information is available at the Nomura Disclosure web page:

http://www.nomura.com/research/pages/disclosures/disclosures.aspx




                                                                   | 22 |

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Nomura Global Research 2011 Global Outlooks

  • 1. Nomura Global Research 2011 Global Outlooks December 2010 Please read the important disclosures and analyst certifications on pp. 16-22. gl
  • 2. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research Hideyuki Takahashi Head of Global Research Senior Corporate Managing Director Thank you for your interest in Nomura research in 2010. Our global fixed income and equity research teams have issued global outlook reports for 2011 covering macroeconomics, forex, equity strategy, inflation strategy, and geopolitics. We have also put together distinctive 2011 outlook reports for each region. We hope you will find the investment ideas presented in these products useful. Nomura has endeavored to provide research spanning the globe, and with the increasing globalization of financial markets, we think research in tune with changes in global trends will be more important than ever. We started up US fixed income research operations in 2009 and US equity research in October 2010, completing our lineup of economic, forex, equity, fixed income and quantitative analysis research. In 2011, Nomura aims to have our researchers in each region cooperate across borders to provide research highlighting new investment opportunities. Expect more good things from Nomura research in the new year. Michael Guarnieri Global Head of Fixed Income Research Paul Norris Head of Global Equity Research |1|
  • 3. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011Global Outlooks 2011 Global Economic Outlook Rocky Road of Recovery The developed world recovery is set to stay muted due to ongoing de-leveraging, fiscal restraint and other crisis legacies. With better fundamentals and fewer aftermath issues, much of the emerging world, led by Asia, is set to keep growing briskly. Developed-world inflation should stay contained, but we see the ECB and BOE raising rates way ahead of the Fed and BOJ. We see inflationary pressures mounting in EM as funds keep flowing in and the authorities intervene to stem rising currencies. Downside risks: euro area fiscal crisis escalates and spreads; an investment pull-back in China; EM overheating turns sour. An upside surprise?: animal spirits stir and crisis-calibrated monetary policies help release pent-up developed world demand. We anticipate the US dollar consolidating in 2011 against other major currencies, but weakening against EM currencies. 2011 Global FX Outlook A global balancing act We believe the outlook for risky currencies is mildly positive for 2011. This assessment is based on a consistent historical pattern of returns during similar points in the cycle. The challenges are: 1) this view is buy-side consensus and we must be alert to overshooting in price and positioning (and we have a clear ‘value’ focus in our recommendations below); 2) a sustained shift in Fed view (something we dispute); 3) that the notion of EM economic outperformance may be tested in 2011 (we think markets will look beyond any temporary growth convergence); 4) EM economic outperformance, butting against continued US political pressures, may exacerbate tensions around global rebalancing in general and around CNY in particular; 5) Events in Europe, most critically Spain, threaten to upset risk markets. 2011 Global Equity Strategy Outlook Reducing the Risk Premium The 6% risk premium now embedded in global equities seems inappropriately high to us compared with current volatility and credit spreads, while implied growth rates look out of line with likely economic and earnings trends. We forecast earnings growth of 16% in 2011, and a total return of 20%. We expect asset allocators in developed economies to respond to the valuation gap that now exists between stocks and bonds. Regionally, we reduce exposure to emerging markets as policy tightening and an already heavy inflow of capital limit the scope for further asset price gains. We still expect positive returns in emerging markets. We increase exposure to Japanese and US equities because we think both regions will likely continue to benefit from loose monetary policy and the aforementioned asset shift, while equity valuations in Japan look especially appealing. If stock prices and bond yields rise, Financials should outperform, while sectors that can grow organically should also do well. |2|
  • 4. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Global Outlooks 2011 Global Fixed Income Strategy Outlook Four Macro Themes for 2011 One of the golden rules of year-ahead articles is to begin with a healthy dose of humility. To be fair, many of our core themes in 2010 fared well. We were bullish G4 rates, which at the start of the year was a highly unpopular view. We believed decoupling between large developed economies and China and its large trading partners would be a definitive trade in 2010 – and we stuck with the trade despite the substantial shock to risk appetite during Europe’s debt crisis. We expected continued loose G4 monetary policy to be supportive of carry trades, especially in short-end interest rates – our systematic taking of that carry risk was one of the more underappreciated trades of 2010. 2011 Global Inflation Outlook Reality Check We stress test the vision of a world where inflation never occurs again. There is no need to expect hyper-inflation (and we don’t) to find inflation markets complacent. Inflation markets have experienced highly distinct periods over the past three years, from concerns about an inflation spiral up to summer 2008 (remember the inflation caps?), a more balanced scenario in 2009, moving to deflation concerns in the middle of 2010 (remember deflation floors?) and recovering somewhat since then. As of the end of 2010, we appear to be in a transition period. But we see current valuations as low against fundamentals: despite all the headwinds, the economy is in a recovery phase, upside pressures are mounting while deflationary forces are diminishing. So 2011 should be a reasonably strong year for inflation valuations, something closer to 2009 than 2010. 2011 Global Geopolitics Outlook Politics Remain Pivotal Even as Risk Aversion Recedes Politics and policy will continue to be key drivers of market sentiment as governments move forward in 2011 with exit strategies from the financial crisis. Generic issues where policy decisions stand to play a particularly important role include the management of capital inflows and food price inflation. Decisions in the United States – ranging from fiscal policy to relations with China – stand to be the main focus of markets. Sovereign debt issues could yet pull market attention back to the eurozone, although a repeat of the 2010 crisis is, in our view, unlikely. We expect the coalition government in the United Kingdom to survive potentially difficult local elections and a referendum set for 5 May 2011. In the Middle East, a number of issues stand to fuel tensions locally, but we see only a low probability of a major global shock emanating from the region in the next 12 months, eg, an Israeli military strike against Iran. We expect China to continue a smooth trajectory towards the handover of power to the 5th Generation leadership in 2012-13. |3|
  • 5. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks 2011 European Economic Outlook Finding the balance Policymakers in Europe need to strike a balance between different policy options. That potentially leaves even more scope than usual for policy errors. The sovereign debt crisis is the issue that has dominated the thinking of European policymakers over 2010 and will no doubt continue to do so in the year ahead. Periphery governments must continue with their programme of fiscal austerity and structural reform. Too much tightening runs the risk of economic stagnation or political opposition which could render it unfeasible, losing the confidence of markets and official backers; too little and markets lose confidence anyway. 2011 EEMEA Economic Outlook A Postmodern World Structural changes, combined with cyclical trends, are leading EEMEA policymakers to adopt new strategies to cope with shifting global growth, rising inflation and increased fiscal scrutiny. Postmodernism: A style and concept characterized by distrust of theories and ideologies, and by the drawing of attention to conventions, Oxford English dictionary. 2011 European Equity Strategy Outlook Reasons for reinvestment A key reason behind the low multiples attached to European stocks is the lack of organic growth. However, with high rates of profitability on existing capital, a very low cost of debt, continued economic recovery and indications that investors are rewarding more proactive deployment of cash flows – CEOs are likely to increase organic investment as well as M&A. We forecast a 13% gain for European equities in 2011. We are biased towards sectors that benefit from rising stock markets and lower risk premiums, and prefer ‘B to B’ over ‘B to C’. We do not want to ‘pay-up’ for defensive exposure, therefore we overweight Financials, Tech and Media, and underweight Utilities, Consumer Staples and Consumer Cyclicals. We downgrade exposure to both Healthcare and Telecom, while adding to Industrials and Financials. |4|
  • 6. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks 2011 European Media Outlook Investment-driven growth, accretive acquisitions and M&A 2010 has produced some upside surprises from the early cyclical advertising exposed stocks. There may still be scope for further cyclical gains, but the power to shock is reduced. Earnings upgrades will have to be generated by internal investment in organic growth initiatives and accretive acquisitions. Our top picks for internally generated growth are Reed Elsevier (which has raised investment levels, in growth markets), Telenet and Eutelsat. As well as making accretive acquisitions, some media companies could become M&A targets in 2011. BSkyB is our top pick on M&A grounds and a bid of 800p+ could come as early as Q1. 2011 Asia FX Outlook Capital flows, growth ebbs We identify the following key themes driving Asia FX into 2011: 1. Capital inflows into EM and particularly Asia; 2. Asian central banks implementing more capital controls; 3. The impact of capital controls and the risks of an FX policy shift towards allowing appreciation; 4. CNY appreciation; and 5. Relative Asia growth outperformance, but risks of growth slowing. 2011 Asian interest rate strategy Outlook History rhymes We retain a positive view on Asian interest rate markets into 2011. Our view is underpinned by several factors: 1) an ongoing regional economic slowdown; 2) our assumption that there will be less pass-through of high commodity prices to underlying inflation than the market believes; 3) the changed reaction function of regional central banks who are less inclined to tighten policy into a commodity price-driven rise in headline inflation than they were in 2007-08; 4) regulatory changes in the global banking, insurance and pension industries, which are spurring demand for duration; and 5) a bias among regional policy makers to tighten monetary conditions via exchange rates rather than interest rates. |5|
  • 7. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks 2011 Asia Pacific Equity Strategy Outlook Deflation, inflation and the return of the productive economy We expect global equities to deliver positive returns as funds move away from bonds as growth fears subside. Asian equities should benefit from rising domestic consumption, real negative interest rates, wealth effects and growing bi-lateral trade between EM. Asian authorities continue to prioritise growth over inflation. We upgrade Taiwan on better global growth prospects. We expect companies demonstrating better competitiveness and beneficiaries of productivity gains to outperform. We highlight them below. We view 2011 as the start of the world's population shifting from favourable demographics to an aging society. This is also passing through Asia from Japan, Korea and Taiwan. The world’s aging comes at a time when China has reached the 'Lewis' point — it has run out of cheap labour. Wage costs in Asia are rising quickly. 2011 Asia Pacific Quantitative Outlook Productivity factor for extra juice Productivity and competitiveness, as well as the ability of companies to manage costs, sustain capital spending and grow market share, will likely be key return drivers in 2011. In terms of styles in Asia, we suggest adding exposure to the composite productivity factor in 2011 and continue to emphasise momentum and growth over value. We present our suggested quant screen approach in 2011. 2011 China Equity Strategy Outlook Higher ground We believe solid earnings growth (21%+ y-y), sufficient liquidity (+18% y-y M2 growth) and undemanding valuations (in line with historical average forward P/E of 12.6x) will support 20%-plus upside in China’s equity market in 2011. Against a likely backdrop of surging inflation, interest hikes, RMB appreciation, the 12th FYP and rising global commodity prices, we spell out our sector winners/losers for 2011. We are Bullish on Financials, Property, Consumer, Oil & gas and Online gaming. Near-term concern over inflation will weigh on equity market performance. But amid tightening monetary policy and price control efforts, any share price weakness should present buying opportunities for long-term gains. |6|
  • 8. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks 2011 Korea Equity Strategy Outlook Land of the investing calm We expect Kospi earnings to rise 15% in 2011. Our market year-end target is 2230, with a fair risk premium of 6.7%. Unlike 2010, Korean equities are entering 2011 with no signs of overheating. The global economy has avoided a double dip, valuations remain inexpensive, while liquidity conditions and sentiment are favourable. We prefer those stocks benefiting from rising commodity prices. BoK rate hikes have been much slower than expected, despite current account surpluses having reached a record high, resulting in loose monetary conditions and excess liquidity. A highly leveraged household, subdued property prices and a strengthening won are delaying aggressive monetary policy tightening, and has helped sentiment on Korea equities. We see Korea as is a key beneficiary of emerging market growth. 2011 Singapore Equity Strategy Outlook Riding the reflation cycle in 2011 We see 10 to 15% market returns in Singapore in 2011, underpinned by attractive valuations, favourable liquidity conditions and a strong S$. Macro and industry drivers underpin our positive stance towards banks (attractive valuations), commodities (food inflation), offshore marine (capex cycle) and commercial property (cyclical upswing). A strong currency, reasonable valuations and available policy flexibility (strong fiscal position) support Singapore’s market outlook in 2011. Moderation in exports due to a stronger S$ is consistent with our view of slower but more sustainable GDP growth going into 2011. Greater cooperation within ASEAN to improve trade and FDI across ASEAN, while better Singapore-Malaysia relations could accelerate cross-border investments. 2011 Malaysia Equity Strategy Outlook The rally is still young Most of the characteristics of the super bull market in the early 1990s have resurfaced, with five key features clearly apparent: economic recovery, liquidity, sector rotational plays, M&A activity and rising retail participation. The excitement infused by the ongoing flurry of M&A activity in three different sectors can only be positive for market sentiment, not to mention for investment banking earnings. Set against a favourable backdrop of — 1) an ongoing consumption boom, driven by a younger and wealthier population; 2) improving commodity prices; and 3) ample liquidity supporting asset reflation evident in the buoyant property market — the bull market in Malaysia looks set to continue into 2011. Going into the New Year, we believe the property, palm oil and bank sectors will be the winners. |7|
  • 9. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks 2011 India Equity Strategy Outlook Under the weather We expect 2011 to be a year of below-average returns for the market and set our December 2011 Sensex target at 22,100, implying a potential return of around 12%. We see downside risk to the 20% y-y earnings growth in FY12F now being priced in by consensus. We believe this, combined with a likely tightening of the policy environment, could restrict premium expansion for equities. The factors that could dominate policy are the strength of consumer demand and inflation. Global commodity prices will likely be key in determining the evolution of inflation, the current account and policy action. 2011 Japan Equity Strategy Outlook An end to collective pessimism 1. We think Japanese equities are likely to outperform global equities in 2011. 2. We expect support from improvement in Japanese equities’ relative valuations, firming earnings momentum, and the BOJ's monetary policy stance. 3. Our end-2011 TOPIX target is 1,100. 4. As key stock-selection themes we see: (1) a steepening of the JGB yield curve; (2) ongoing rapid growth and rising inflation rates in emerging economies, and related strengthening of their currencies; (3) Japanese companies’ use of accumulated cash to increase shareholder returns and fund capital investment and M&As; and (4) improvement in the inventory-shipment balance in the electronic parts and devices sector. 5. We recommend overweighting the financials, housing/real estate, machinery, and electrical machinery/precision equipment sectors. 2011 Japan Economic Outlook We expect Japan to break out of its lull in 2011, led by exports We have made revisions to our economic outlook for FY10–FY12 following the announcement of second preliminary real GDP estimates for 2010 Q3. Reflecting retroactive revisions to figures, we have raised our FY10 forecast for real GDP growth from 2.7% to 3.3%. We maintain our growth forecasts of 1.2% for FY11 and 2.1% for FY12. We expect the Japanese economy to perform weakly in the near term, but we maintain our outlook for Japan to break out of its economic lull in 2011 H2, led by exports. |8|
  • 10. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks 2011 US Rates Outlook Calibrating the Rates Compass The recent movements in the bond market have a similar look and feel to what took place during December 2009. The market went on to trade better in the first few weeks of 2010 only to fade up to higher yields. A repeat of that sort of trading experience could be indeed what is ahead at the start of 2011. However, what is different now in our minds is that we believe investors will continue to “sell into strength” whereas in the latter half of 2010 they would “buy into strength.” We therefore maintain an overall bearish bias and see rates trading at the higher end of our basline core view of 2.35% to 3.60% in 1H11. This range of 125 bps compares to the 160 bps of 2010. We believe that as economic variability declines, that overall rate movements will also contract. 2011 Securitized Products Outlook Navigating the Maze of Options Agency MBS had started the year 2010 on a nervous note as MBS spreads were very tight and the market was worried about the likely widening of spreads once the Fed concluded its MBS purchase program in 1Q‘10. Although agency MBS spreads held up pretty well for about 3-4 months after the Fed‘s purchase program was completed, the spread between the current coupon MBS yield and the average yield of 5-year and 10-year Treasuries had widened by close to 40bp from the historical tights hit in July’10. 2011 Non-agency MBS Market Outlook Review of 2010 and Key Themes for 2011 Outlook for housing and loan modifications: Our base case forecast is that national home prices will drop 5% in 2011 driven by distressed inventory liquidations and demographic trends. We present our outlook for modification activity going forward Mortgage Credit Performance: We present our outlook for liquidation timelines, severities, credit burnout, prepayments, and overall default and loss projections. Supply and Demand Technicals: The technical backdrop should remain very strong for nonagency RMBS given expectations for limited new issue supply and the potential reinvestment demand from paydowns. Recommended positioning in the RMBS market for 2011: We maintain an overweight bias on the overall non-agency sector, and recommend buying recent vintage SSNR option ARM bonds, SSNR dirty prime/cleaner Alt-A fixed-rate collateral, and longer duration subprime seasoned mezzanine bonds. |9|
  • 11. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Regional / Country / Product Outlooks 2011 GNMA Market Outlook Navigating the Maze of Options We think that a combination of the tightening of FHA underwriting standards and higher insurance fees will lead to a relatively higher percentage of loans being insured through private mortgage insurance in 2011. Further, the surge in home sales in the sub-$200k price segment due to tax credits has subsided. This, coupled with lower conventional to FHA refinancing, should lead to lower GNMA net issuance in 2011. Overall, we expect gross issuance of GNMA MBS to decline from $363bn in 2010 to $282bn in 2011 and the net issuance to decline from $182bn in 2010 to $134bn in 2011. 2011 Auto ABS Market Outlook Our main investment recommendation Auto ABS was a solid performer in 2010 amid robust issuance and range bound spreads. Issuance of auto floorplan and subprime ABS saw a significant uptick while prime loans and leases were down. GM’s purchase of AmeriCredit changes the captive issuer landscape, and we anticipate the new General Motors Financial to ramp up its near-prime and lease offerings in 2011. While credit enhancement decreased compared to 2009, mitigating factors help maintain credit protection, and we believe bonds are adequately enhanced as structures de-lever quickly. Auto collateral performance remains strong: early credit metrics show that 2010 vintage is performing on par with 2009 and better than 2007 and 2008, while recoveries have benefitted from a strong used car market. 2011 CMBS Market Outlook Key Themes in the CMBS Market Property Fundamentals: As the economy slowly recovers, occupancy and rents at commercial properties are starting to rebound. However, because of the steep drop in occupancy levels during the previous recession, net operating income will continue to be weak across all property types through 2011, resulting in a steady stream of new delinquencies. Commercial Property Prices: Commercial property prices are likely to continue bouncing along the bottom as more distressed assets hit the market, while stronger trophy assets garner increased investor interest. Maturities: Although the $38bn in loans set to mature in 2011 have a weaker profile than those that matured in 2010, they will benefit from increased credit availability and investor appetite. We expect that 60% of loans coming due will be able to refinance, while another 10% will receive a maturity date extension. | 10 |
  • 12. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Global Collaboration -Running Themes The coming surge in food prices Global Economics and Strategy Even with lacklustre growth in advanced economies, another multiyear surge in food prices is likely given rapidly growing demand for food in the developing world, constraints and uncertainties surrounding food supply and the development of increasingly powerful feedback loops. We construct a Nomura Food Vulnerability Index for 80 countries. We also discuss: Macro implications, trading recommendations from our fixed income and equity strategy teams and specific stock ideas. The case for capital controls in Asia Asia Special Report –Global Economics Under certain conditions, capital controls can be a legitimate policy response to surging inflows, but they are no panacea. In this Special Report we draw on a scorecard approach and our country specialists to assess which countries in the region are most likely to impose controls. Free-flowing foreign capital is no doubt beneficial to the world economy, but the experience in emerging economies is that sudden surges can fuel asset bubbles and, if the inflows suddenly reverse, a high risk of financial crisis. Asian policymakers raised this concern at the recent IMF-World Bank annual meetings, and for good reason: the growth rates and interest rates of Asian economies are now so much higher than those of the advanced economies. Machinery China No barriers We believe rising labour costs, an improving product mix and gradually increasing pricing power will bring the limelight back to strong growth in the machinery sector. We would advise investors to focus on excavators and concrete machinery: these should be 2011’s fastest growing segments. SANY, Zoomlion and Komatsu are our top BUYs on this basis. With listed China exposure still limited to HKSE, we also recommend Japanese suppliers Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Toshiba Machine and Nabtesco. Possible negative growth in March 2011 could hurt share prices, while strong volume growth from 2Q and onwards should support share-price appreciation. We expect rising mechanisation in China as a consequence of labour cost increases. Chinese construction machinery makers will likely become more competitive due to strong growth of the domestic market, improving product quality and technology level. | 11 |
  • 13. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Global Collaboration -Running Themes Global Memory A new direction We are in the middle of a megatrend – the rise of tablets and smartphones. While we think this will dent DRAM demand in the short term, we believe it will benefit the overall memory industry substantially in terms of earnings for several years to come. Samsung Electronics is best prepared for this transition, in our view, and our top pick. We are also BUYers of Hynix and Toshiba. The share prices of memory names move in tandem with memory prices. With the bottom of the memory market in sight, we see memory share prices likely to gather momentum soon. Global Mobile Phone trends Android momentum drives… We expect 2011 handset market trends to follow 2010 patterns, but with an increasing shift to mid-range smartphones, with low-end smartphones key to growth in 2012. The industry shift is continuing, with Apple and Android likely to hold a 50% revenue share in 2012, at the expense of Nokia and RIM. In conjunction with a number of company reports published today (HTC, Motorola, RIM and ZTE), we are updating our forecasts for the global handset market. On a like-for-like basis, our handset unit estimates show an increase from 11% to 16% in 2010, from 9% to 11% in 2011 and from 7% to 10% in 2012. Our handset market revenue forecasts increase to 13% in 2010, from 9% and to 11% from 9% in 2011. Full details are shown in the table below. Smart Grids IT for electric power networks—a new global battleground Smart grid investment is likely to be substantial over a long time frame, but given the ongoing technology standardization and various types of testing, it could take several years to get fully under way, except in areas such as advanced metering infrastructure (AMI). We accordingly see two groups of smart grid-related companies: those with strong short-term earnings growth potential and those with attractive longer-term strategies. | 12 |
  • 14. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Global Collaboration -Running Themes LED lighting Change spurred by demand shift from TVs to lighting Demand for LEDs used in TVs has not grown as much as previously anticipated, but we think demand for LEDs used in general lighting has gotten off to a solid start. As demand shifts to general lighting LEDs, which require high-variety, small-quantity production, from TV LEDs, which require low-variety, mass production, we think competitive factors in all facets of the value chain could change. We previously believed that the LED lighting market would take off in earnest during 2010 through 2011 (refer to Report no. 10-121, LED lighting: The final—and biggest—LED application coming to prominence, issued 26 March 2010). Cosmetics in China C-Bons integration to boost Beiersdorf’s top line and margins In this report, we take a close look at the Chinese cosmetics market and try to assess the relative strengths and weaknesses of the companies under our coverage. With China expected to become the largest cosmetics market in the world over the next 15 years (#3 today) and already representing the primary engine of growth for the sector, we see companies with clear and durable competitive advantages in the region as well positioned to deliver superior medium-term earnings growth at a group level. We believe the market has been too focused on one number – the proportion of total sales derived from China. China Auto and auto parts Passengers in front Auto sales in China are set to expand by 28% to 17.5mn units in 2010F, following 46% growth in 2009. Sales have been underpinned by favourable government policies, momentum inland, and fundamental demand backed by rising personal wealth. We believe there is plenty of gas left in the tank. Our forecasts call for 15% growth in 2011F to 20mn, driven by inland demand (favouring small cars) and replacement demand (upward shift in product mix). We look for continued momentum in passenger cars, taking sales to 12.8mn (up 16.4%). Prices should stay strong in 2011F, with industry utilization remaining above 80% amid a modest 15% forecast rise in capacity to 15mn. | 13 |
  • 15. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research 2011 Global Collaboration -Running Themes Rail equipment Rail on a growth track: next stops Russia and India Both Russia and India have over EUR 200bn of railway development planned, although financing is not yet fully ringfenced: Mainline, freight and high-speed development is starting. While both countries are more open markets than China, we think that localisation and partnerships will be key to accessing these markets. Solid rail equipment demand forecast by Unife: global growth of 2.3% for 2008-15. Faster growth of 4% likely for 2010-15. LatAm, Middle East and Africa, and CIS regions are all forecast to grow fastest at around 4.5% pa to 2015. Europe to grow at a steady 2.2% pa on the back of signalling, services and fleet renewal demand, Asia slowing to 1.3% owing to expected completion of China's high-speed build-out. EUVL poised for mass production Japanese lithography equipment industry facing extinction Extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUVL) is fast emerging as the main candidate to be the next generation in semiconductor lithography technologies. Even companies that had previously viewed double patterning technology (DPT), a technique that allows existing light sources to continue to be used, as the main candidate have been substantially veering toward EUVL for mass production. While we think EUVL will be the mainstream mass production technology in five years’ time, we see risks in basing opinions of companies on changes in lithography technology five years out. Global capital goods: demand and competition in China Japanese/European companies strong in core parts/services Chinese manufacturers are expanding production and increasing sophistication. Sharply rising labor costs have motivated company managers to invest in factory automation (FA), while the accompanying rise in personal incomes is spurring sales of autos and electronics. These factors are combining to create a virtuous cycle beneficial to machinery demand. We expect Japanese and European companies to maintain their technological edge in core components, especially for FA. | 14 |
  • 16. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research Please access our Global Research Portal http://www.nomura.com/research Nomura’s Global Research Portal is designed as a gateway for our clients to access our research from equity, fixed income, economics and FX, with each page giving access to both the latest reports and to those published in the past. To access Global Research Portal, please contact your local Sales Representative to request your account created. | 15 |
  • 17. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research Any Authors named on this report are Research Analysts unless otherwise indicated Analyst Certification Each research analyst identified herein certifies that all of the views expressed in this report by such analyst accurately reflect his or her personal views about the subject securities and issuers. In addition, each research analyst identified on the cover page hereof hereby certifies that no part of his or her compensation was, is, or will be, directly or indirectly related to the specific recommendations or views that he or she has expressed in this research report, nor is it tied to any specific investment banking transactions performed by Nomura Securities International, Inc., Nomura International plc or any other Nomura Group company. Important Disclosures Conflict-of-interest disclosures Important disclosures may be accessed through the following website: http://www.nomura.com/research/pages/disclosures/disclosures.aspx . If you have difficulty with this site or you do not have a password, please contact your Nomura Securities International, Inc. salesperson (1-877-865-5752) or email grpsupport@nomura.com for assistance. Online availability of research and additional conflict-of-interest disclosures Nomura Japanese Equity Research is available electronically for clients in the US on NOMURA.COM, REUTERS, BLOOMBERG and THOMSON ONE ANALYTICS. For clients in Europe, Japan and elsewhere in Asia it is available on NOMURA.COM, REUTERS and BLOOMBERG. Important disclosures may be accessed through the left hand side of the Nomura Disclosure web page http://www.nomura.com/research or requested from Nomura Securities International, Inc., on 1-877-865-5752. If you have any difficulties with the website, please email grpsupport-eu@nomura.com for technical assistance. The analysts responsible for preparing this report have received compensation based upon various factors including the firm's total revenues, a portion of which is generated by Investment Banking activities. Industry Specialists identified in some Nomura International plc research reports are employees within the Firm who are responsible for the sales and trading effort in the sector for which they have coverage. Industry Specialists do not contribute in any manner to the content of research report in which their names appear. Distribution of ratings (Global) Nomura Global Equity Research has 1878 companies under coverage. 48% have been assigned a Buy rating which, for purposes of mandatory disclosures, are classified as a Buy rating; 41% of companies with this rating are investment banking clients of the Nomura Group*. 37% have been assigned a Neutral rating which, for purposes of mandatory disclosures, is classified as a Hold rating; 54% of companies with this rating are investment banking clients of the Nomura Group*. 13% have been assigned a Reduce rating which, for purposes of mandatory disclosures, are classified as a Sell rating; 16% of companies with this rating are investment banking clients of the Nomura Group*. | 16 |
  • 18. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research As at 30 September 2010. *The Nomura Group as defined in the Disclaimer section at the end of this report. Explanation of Nomura's equity research rating system in Europe, Middle East and Africa, US and Latin America for ratings published from 27 October 2008 The rating system is a relative system indicating expected performance against a specific benchmark identified for each individual stock. Analysts may also indicate absolute upside to price target defined as (fair value - current price)/current price, subject to limited management discretion. In most cases, the fair value will equal the analyst's assessment of the current intrinsic fair value of the stock using an appropriate valuation methodology such as discounted cash flow or multiple analysis, etc. STOCKS A rating of 'Buy', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to outperform the Benchmark over the next 12 months. A rating of 'Neutral', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to perform in line with the Benchmark over the next 12 months. A rating of 'Reduce', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to underperform the Benchmark over the next 12 months. A rating of 'RS-Rating Suspended', indicates that the rating and target price have been suspended temporarily to comply with applicable regulations and/or firm policies in certain circumstances including when Nomura is acting in an advisory capacity in a merger or strategic transaction involving the company. Benchmarks are as follows: United States/Europe: Please see valuation methodologies for explanations of relevant benchmarks for stocks (accessible through the left hand side of the Nomura Disclosure web page: http://www.nomura.com/research);Global Emerging Markets (ex-Asia): MSCI Emerging Markets ex-Asia, unless otherwise stated in the valuation methodology. SECTORS A 'Bullish' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to outperform the Benchmark during the next 12 months. A 'Neutral' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to perform in line with the Benchmark during the next 12 months. A 'Bearish' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to underperform the Benchmark during the next 12 months. Benchmarks are as follows: United States: S&P 500; Europe: Dow Jones STOXX 600; Global Emerging Markets (ex-Asia): MSCI Emerging Markets ex-Asia. Explanation of Nomura's equity research rating system for Asian companies under coverage ex Japan published from 30 October 2008 and in Japan from 6 January 2009 STOCKS Stock recommendations are based on absolute valuation upside (downside), which is defined as (Price Target - Current Price) / Current Price, subject to limited management discretion. In most cases, the Price Target will equal the analyst's 12-month intrinsic valuation of the stock, based on an appropriate valuation methodology such as discounted cash flow, multiple analysis, etc. A 'Buy' recommendation indicates that potential upside is 15% or more. A 'Neutral' recommendation indicates that potential upside is less than 15% or downside is less than 5%. | 17 |
  • 19. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research A 'Reduce' recommendation indicates that potential downside is 5% or more. A rating of 'RS' or 'Rating Suspended' indicates that the rating and target price have been suspended temporarily to comply with applicable regulations and/or firm policies in certain circumstances including when Nomura is acting in an advisory capacity in a merger or strategic transaction involving the subject company. Securities and/or companies that are labelled as 'Not rated' or shown as 'No rating' are not in regular research coverage of the Nomura entity identified in the top banner. Investors should not expect continuing or additional information from Nomura relating to such securities and/or companies. SECTORS A 'Bullish' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under coverage is) a positive absolute recommendation. A 'Neutral' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under coverage is) a neutral absolute recommendation. A 'Bearish' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under coverage is) a negative absolute recommendation. Explanation of Nomura's equity research rating system in Japan published prior to 6 January 2009 (and ratings in Europe, Middle East and Africa, US and Latin America published prior to 27 October 2008) STOCKS A rating of '1' or 'Strong buy', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to outperform the Benchmark by 15% or more over the next six months. A rating of '2' or 'Buy', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to outperform the Benchmark by 5% or more but less than 15% over the next six months. A rating of '3' or 'Neutral', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to either outperform or underperform the Benchmark by less than 5% over the next six months. A rating of '4' or 'Reduce', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to underperform the Benchmark by 5% or more but less than 15% over the next six months. A rating of '5' or 'Sell', indicates that the analyst expects the stock to underperform the Benchmark by 15% or more over the next six months. Stocks labeled 'Not rated' or shown as 'No rating' are not in Nomura's regular research coverage. Nomura might not publish additional research reports concerning this company, and it undertakes no obligation to update the analysis, estimates, projections, conclusions or other information contained herein. SECTORS A 'Bullish' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to outperform the Benchmark during the next six months. A 'Neutral' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to perform in line with the Benchmark during the next six months. A 'Bearish' stance, indicates that the analyst expects the sector to underperform the Benchmark during the next six months. Benchmarks are as follows: Japan: TOPIX; United States: S&P 500, MSCI World Technology Hardware & Equipment; Europe, by sector - Hardware/Semiconductors: FTSE W Europe IT Hardware; Telecoms: FTSE W Europe Business | 18 |
  • 20. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research Services; Business Services: FTSE W Europe; Auto & Components: FTSE W Europe Auto & Parts; Communications equipment: FTSE W Europe IT Hardware; Ecology Focus: Bloomberg World Energy Alternate Sources; Global Emerging Markets: MSCI Emerging Markets ex-Asia. Explanation of Nomura's equity research rating system for Asian companies under coverage ex Japan published prior to 30 October 2008 STOCKS Stock recommendations are based on absolute valuation upside (downside), which is defined as (Fair Value - Current Price)/Current Price, subject to limited management discretion. In most cases, the Fair Value will equal the analyst's assessment of the current intrinsic fair value of the stock using an appropriate valuation methodology such as Discounted Cash Flow or Multiple analysis etc. However, if the analyst doesn't think the market will revalue the stock over the specified time horizon due to a lack of events or catalysts, then the fair value may differ from the intrinsic fair value. In most cases, therefore, our recommendation is an assessment of the difference between current market price and our estimate of current intrinsic fair value. Recommendations are set with a 6-12 month horizon unless specified otherwise. Accordingly, within this horizon, price volatility may cause the actual upside or downside based on the prevailing market price to differ from the upside or downside implied by the recommendation. A 'Strong buy' recommendation indicates that upside is more than 20%. A 'Buy' recommendation indicates that upside is between 10% and 20%. A 'Neutral' recommendation indicates that upside or downside is less than 10%. A 'Reduce' recommendation indicates that downside is between 10% and 20%. A 'Sell' recommendation indicates that downside is more than 20%. SECTORS A 'Bullish' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under coverage is) a positive absolute recommendation. A 'Neutral' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under coverage is) a neutral absolute recommendation. A 'Bearish' rating means most stocks in the sector have (or the weighted average recommendation of the stocks under coverage is) a negative absolute recommendation. Price targets Price targets, if discussed, reflect in part the analyst's estimates for the company's earnings. The achievement of any price target may be impeded by general market and macroeconomic trends, and by other risks related to the company or the market, and may not occur if the company's earnings differ from estimates. Disclaimers This publication contains material that has been prepared by the Nomura entity identified on the banner at the top or the bottom of page 1 herein and, if applicable, with the contributions of one or more Nomura entities whose employees and their respective affiliations are specified on page 1 herein or elsewhere identified in the publication. Affiliates and subsidiaries of Nomura Holdings, Inc. (collectively, the 'Nomura Group'), include: Nomura Securities Co., Ltd. ('NSC') Tokyo, Japan; Nomura International plc, United Kingdom; Nomura Securities International, Inc. ('NSI'), New York, NY; Nomura International (Hong Kong) Ltd., Hong Kong; Nomura Financial Investment (Korea) Co., Ltd., Korea (Information on Nomura | 19 |
  • 21. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research analysts registered with the Korea Financial Investment Association ('KOFIA') can be found on the KOFIA Intranet at http://dis.kofia.or.kr ); Nomura Singapore Ltd., Singapore (Registration number 197201440E, regulated by the Monetary Authority of Singapore); Nomura Securities Singapore Pte Ltd., Singapore (Registration number 198702521E, regulated by the Monetary Authority of Singapore); Capital Nomura Securities Public Company Limited; Nomura Australia Ltd., Australia (ABN 48 003 032 513), regulated by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission and holder of an Australian financial services licence number 246412; P.T. Nomura Indonesia, Indonesia; Nomura Securities Malaysia Sdn. Bhd., Malaysia; Nomura International (Hong Kong) Ltd., Taipei Branch, Taiwan; Nomura Financial Advisory and Securities (India) Private Limited, Mumbai, India (Registered Address: Ceejay House, Level 11, Plot F, Shivsagar Estate, Dr. Annie Besant Road, Worli, Mumbai- 400 018, India; SEBI Registration No: BSE INB011299030, NSE INB231299034, INF231299034, INE 231299034). THIS MATERIAL IS: (I) FOR YOUR PRIVATE INFORMATION, AND WE ARE NOT SOLICITING ANY ACTION BASED UPON IT; (II) NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS AN OFFER TO SELL OR A SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO BUY ANY SECURITY IN ANY JURISDICTION WHERE SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION WOULD BE ILLEGAL; AND (III) BASED UPON INFORMATION THAT WE CONSIDER RELIABLE. NOMURA GROUP DOES NOT WARRANT OR REPRESENT THAT THE PUBLICATION IS ACCURATE, COMPLETE, RELIABLE, FIT FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR MERCHANTABLE AND DOES NOT ACCEPT LIABILITY FOR ANY ACT (OR DECISION NOT TO ACT) RESULTING FROM USE OF THIS PUBLICATION AND RELATED DATA. TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMISSIBLE ALL WARRANTIES AND OTHER ASSURANCES BY NOMURA GROUP ARE HEREBY EXCLUDED AND NOMURA GROUP SHALL HAVE NO LIABILITY FOR THE USE, MISUSE, OR DISTRIBUTION OF THIS INFORMATION. Opinions expressed are current opinions as of the original publication date appearing on this material only and the information, including the opinions contained herein, are subject to change without notice. Nomura is under no duty to update this publication. If and as applicable, NSI's investment banking relationships, investment banking and non-investment banking compensation and securities ownership (identified in this report as 'Disclosures Required in the United States'), if any, are specified in disclaimers and related disclosures in this report. In addition, other members of the Nomura Group may from time to time perform investment banking or other services (including acting as advisor, manager or lender) for, or solicit investment banking or other business from, companies mentioned herein. Further, the Nomura Group, and/or its officers, directors and employees, including persons, without limitation, involved in the preparation or issuance of this material may, to the extent permitted by applicable law and/or regulation, have long or short positions in, and buy or sell, the securities (including ownership by NSI, referenced above), or derivatives (including options) thereof, of companies mentioned herein, or related securities or derivatives. In addition, the Nomura Group, excluding NSI, may act as a market maker and principal, willing to buy and sell certain of the securities of companies mentioned herein. Further, the Nomura Group may buy and sell certain of the securities of companies mentioned herein, as agent for its clients. Investors should consider this report as only a single factor in making their investment decision and, as such, the report should not be viewed as identifying or suggesting all risks, direct or indirect, that may be associated with any investment decision. Please see the further disclaimers in the disclosure information on companies covered by Nomura analysts available at www.nomura.com/research under the 'Disclosure' tab. Nomura Group produces a number of different types of research product including, among others, fundamental analysis, quantitative analysis and short term trading ideas; recommendations contained in one type of research product may differ from recommendations contained in other types of | 20 |
  • 22. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research research product, whether as a result of differing time horizons, methodologies or otherwise; it is possible that individual employees of Nomura may have different perspectives to this publication. NSC and other non-US members of the Nomura Group (i.e. excluding NSI), their officers, directors and employees may, to the extent it relates to non-US issuers and is permitted by applicable law, have acted upon or used this material prior to, or immediately following, its publication. Foreign-currency-denominated securities are subject to fluctuations in exchange rates that could have an adverse effect on the value or price of, or income derived from, the investment. In addition, investors in securities such as ADRs, the values of which are influenced by foreign currencies, effectively assume currency risk. The securities described herein may not have been registered under the US Securities Act of 1933, and, in such case, may not be offered or sold in the United States or to US persons unless they have been registered under such Act, or except in compliance with an exemption from the registration requirements of such Act. Unless governing law permits otherwise, you must contact a Nomura entity in your home jurisdiction if you want to use our services in effecting a transaction in the securities mentioned in this material. This publication has been approved for distribution in the United Kingdom and European Union as investment research by Nomura International plc ('NIPlc'), which is authorized and regulated by the UK Financial Services Authority ('FSA') and is a member of the London Stock Exchange. It does not constitute a personal recommendation, as defined by the FSA, or take into account the particular investment objectives, financial situations, or needs of individual investors. It is intended only for investors who are 'eligible counterparties' or 'professional clients' as defined by the FSA, and may not, therefore, be redistributed to retail clients as defined by the FSA. This publication may be distributed in Germany via Nomura Bank (Deutschland) GmbH, which is authorized and regulated in Germany by the Federal Financial Supervisory Authority ('BaFin'). This publication has been approved by Nomura International (Hong Kong) Ltd. ('NIHK'), which is regulated by the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission, for distribution in Hong Kong by NIHK. This publication has been approved for distribution in Australia by Nomura Australia Ltd, which is authorized and regulated in Australia by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission ('ASIC'). This publication has also been approved for distribution in Malaysia by Nomura Securities Malaysia Sdn Bhd. In Singapore, this publication has been distributed by Nomura Singapore Limited ('NSL') and/or Nomura Securities Singapore Pte Ltd ('NSS'). NSL and NSS accepts legal responsibility for the content of this publication, where it concerns securities, futures and foreign exchange, issued by their foreign affiliates in respect of recipients who are not accredited, expert or institutional investors as defined by the Securities and Futures Act (Chapter 289). Recipients of this publication should contact NSL or NSS (as the case may be) in respect of matters arising from, or in connection with, this publication. Unless prohibited by the provisions of Regulation S of the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, this material is distributed in the United States, by Nomura Securities International, Inc., a US-registered broker-dealer, which accepts responsibility for its contents in accordance with the provisions of Rule 15a-6, under the US Securities Exchange Act of 1934. This publication has not been approved for distribution in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia or to clients other than 'professional clients' in the United Arab Emirates by Nomura Saudi Arabia, Nomura International plc or any other member of the Nomura Group, as the case may be. Neither this publication nor any copy thereof may be taken or transmitted or distributed, directly or indirectly, by any person other than those authorised to do so into the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia or in the United Arab Emirates or to any person located in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia or to clients other than 'professional clients' in the United Arab Emirates. By accepting to receive this publication, you represent that you are not located in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia or that you are a 'professional client' in the United Arab Emirates and agree to comply with these restrictions. Any failure to comply with these restrictions may constitute a violation of the laws of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia or the United Arab Emirates. | 21 |
  • 23. 2011 Global Outlooks - Global Research No part of this material may be (i) copied, photocopied, or duplicated in any form, by any means; or (ii) redistributed without the prior written consent of the Nomura Group member identified in the banner on page 1 of this report. Further information on any of the securities mentioned herein may be obtained upon request. If this publication has been distributed by electronic transmission, such as e-mail, then such transmission cannot be guaranteed to be secure or error-free as information could be intercepted, corrupted, lost, destroyed, arrive late or incomplete, or contain viruses. The sender therefore does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this publication, which may arise as a result of electronic transmission. If verification is required, please request a hard-copy version. Additional information available upon request NIPlc and other Nomura Group entities manage conflicts identified through the following: their Chinese Wall, confidentiality and independence policies, maintenance of a Restricted List and a Watch List, personal account dealing rules, policies and procedures for managing conflicts of interest arising from the allocation and pricing of securities and impartial investment research and disclosure to clients via client documentation. Disclosure information is available at the Nomura Disclosure web page: http://www.nomura.com/research/pages/disclosures/disclosures.aspx | 22 |