Japan’s Nikkei inches down, trading muted before Wall Street holiday

Japan’s Nikkei inches down, trading muted before Wall Street holiday

Source: Live Mint

TOKYO, – Japan’s Nikkei share average inched down on Wednesday as investors avoided active bets with Wall Street closed for the Christmas holiday.

The Nikkei was down 0.12% at 38,990.56 by the midday break, after rising as much as 0.37% after the open.

“The market struggled to find direction with foreign investors away for the holiday season,” said Fumio Matsumoto, chief strategist at Okasan Securities.

“This time of the year, local individuals were the only ones active in trading but they do not want to place active bets when large stocks do not move actively with the absence of foreign investors.”

Entertainment company Konami fell 1.74% to drag the Nikkei the most. Drugmaker Daiichi Sankyo lost 1.41% and phone company KDDI slipped 0.59%.

The broader Topix fell 0.62% to 2,710.25, dragged lower by Toyota Motor’s 0.88% fall. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group lost 0.91%.

Honda Motor slipped 0.77% after surging 12.2% in the previous session following the announcement of a share buyback on Monday.

Local firms’ share buybacks have supported Japanese equities, but the buying is paused at the end of the year, which is also weighing on the Nikkei, said Okasan’s Matsumoto.

Nissan Motor erased early losses to surge 8.6% to become the top percentage gainer on the Nikkei.

Heavy machinery maker Kawasaki Heavy Industries jumped 4.78%.

All but two of the 33 industry sub-indexes of the Tokyo Stock Exchange fell.

Steelmakers rose 0.36% and energy explorers inched up 0.6%.

Of more than 1,600 stocks trading on the TSE’s prime market, 19% rose and 77% fell, with 3% trading flat.

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.



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