TOKYO: Japanese shares fell on Wednesday, led by declines in financial stocks after comments from a top Bank of Japan official lowered expectations for an early interest rate hike.
The Nikkei slipped 0.2percent to 42,220.77 by 0216 GMT, while the broader Topix was down 0.4percent at 3,069.25. BOJ Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino said on Tuesday that the central bank should keep raising interest rates but warned that global economic uncertainty remained high, suggesting it was in no rush to push up still-low borrowing costs. “Market expectations for a BOJ interest rate hike toned down after the remarks from Himino, who was still careful about the impact of (US President Donald Trump’s) tariffs,” said Seiichi Suzuki, chief equity market analyst at Tokai Tokyo Intelligence Laboratory. “Obviously, the momentum of buying by foreign investors, who have supported the rally in domestic stocks, has faded.”
Optimism about the domestic corporate outlook and easing concerns about the impact of Trump’s tariffs sent both the Nikkei and Topix to record highs last month. A trade deal reached in July between the US and Japan opened the scope for the BOJ to raise rates again this year. On Wednesday, the bank index fell 2.19percent to become the worst performer among the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s (TSE) 33 industry sub-indexes. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group lost 1.91percent. Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group and Mizuho Financial Group both dropped 2.2percent. The brokerage sector fell 1.35percent.
Investors globally awaited the monthly US payrolls report, due on Friday, to see if weak US job growth continued for a fourth month in August. Of the more than 1,600 stocks trading on the TSE’s prime section, 61percent rose, 34percent fell and 3percent traded flat.





















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