Nikkei hits 4-week high on Greece election outcome

Reuters Updated - January 24, 2018 at 03:17 PM.

Japanese share prices rose to a four-week high on Tuesday, with some market players reporting a large pick-up in buy orders from foreign investors after Greece’s election outcome did not disrupt European financial markets.

Market players were also betting that stimulus from the European Central Bank will keep the money sloshing around in financial markets, and that upcoming earning reports will show Japanese exporters benefitting from a weaker yen, while importers reap a windfall from a sharp slide in oil prices.

The Nikkei rose 1.6 per cent to 17,745.29, its highest level since late December, extending a recovery from a 2 1/2-month low of 16,592.57 hit on January 16.

“We appear to be coming out of this period of extreme volatilities and worries stemming from European deflation and the policy response to that. There is some positive resilience in the market,’’ said Stefan Worrall, director of equity cash sales at Credit Suisse.

All but one of the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s 33 industry sub-indexes rose, led by precision machinery manufacturers and financials.

Hoya jumped 5.1 per cent to an eight-year high after JPMorgan lifted its rating to ‘overweight’ from ‘neutral’, added the company to its list of most preferred stocks in Japan and raised its target price by 46 per cent.

It said Hoya was likely to develop a monopolistic position in photomask blanks used in extreme ultraviolet semiconductor lithography.

Among financials, insurer Tokio Marine Holdings rose 2.5 per cent, while megaban k Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group gained 2.0 per cent.

But investors continued to shun energy-related shares as oil prices flirted with 5 1/2-year lows. Shares of Marubeni Corp fell 1.6 per cent, adding to a near 5 per cent slide a day earlier when the trading house halved its annual profit forecast due to plunging oil and commodity prices. Rival Mitsui Co Ltd fell 1.5 per cent.

Some analysts say the fallout from low oil prices could hit broader market sentiment given that the plight of oil producing countries could be worsening, with Russia’s debt rating downgraded to junk status.

“This is a market powered by the central bank stimulus but there are risks such as weak oil prices and the fallout that comes with that. So the market is likely to remain volatile,’’ said Norihiro Fujito, senior investment strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.

Both the broader Topix and the new JPX-Nikkei Index 400 gained 1.2 per cent.

Published on January 27, 2015 04:15