Japan's Nikkei reverses early fall as Kioxia rebounds
- Nikkei climbed 0.84% to close at 63,272.11 after falling as much as 0.67% earlier
TOKYO: Japan’s Nikkei share average recouped early losses on Wednesday to end higher as memory chipmaker Kioxia rebounded, while the broader Topix rose 1% as investors grew confident about the domestic corporate outlook.
The Nikkei climbed 0.84% to close at 63,272.11 after falling as much as 0.67% earlier. The broader Topix rose 1.01% to 3,912.14.
“There are still uncertainties in the market, but domestic firms have reported a relatively strong outlook,” said Masahiro Ichikawa, chief market strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui DS Asset Management.
“The market had expected companies to flag a modest outlook (this earnings season), but it turned out that overall it was not as weak as they had expected.”
Shares of Olympus Corp jumped 19.83% after the medical equipment maker forecast annual net profit ahead of market expectations and announced a share buyback plan.
Kioxia jumped 9.54% after early losses to become the biggest source of the Nikkei’s gain. Its gains covered the losses of chip-related heavyweights Advantest and Tokyo Electron, which fell 1.45% and 1.57%, respectively.
Kioxia, which joined the Nikkei 225 in April, saw trading value of its shares hit 24 trillion yen ($152.20 billion) last month, according to the Tokyo Stock Exchange, a record high since the exchange created the prime market in its exchange reform in 2022.
Fibre optic cable maker Furukawa Electric surged 15.27%, extending gains from the previous session. It jumped 16% on Tuesday after announcing a stock split.
Of the Nikkei members, 158 stocks rose, 64 fell and three traded flat.
Trading firms rose, with Mitsubishi Corp and Mitsui & Co up 6.62% and 4.5%, respectively.
Mitsubishi became the biggest source of the Topix’s gain.
Toyota Motor rose 3.39% after a six-session losing streak, while Honda Motor gained 2.2%.





















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