Japan’s Nikkei gains as chip-sector shares track US peers higher
- Japanese markets are open Thursday and Friday as usual
TOKYO: Japan’s Nikkei share average rose on Wednesday, led higher by chip-sector stocks, tracking an advance among US peers on Wall Street overnight.
The Nikkei added 0.3% to 50,559.01, as of 0150 GMT, on course for a fourth consecutive winning session.
The biggest boosts to the index came from heavily weighted semiconductor equipment makers Advantest and Tokyo Electron, which added a combined 119 points to the Nikkei.
The biggest percentage gainer was Tokyo Electron’s smaller rival Screen Holdings, which surged 9.3% after Morgan Stanley MUFG raised its price target on the stock. Overnight, the Philadelphia SE semiconductor index climbed 0.5% to mark a fourth straight session of gains.
The S&P 500 touched a record high.
The broader Topix slipped 0.1% to 3,418.75, with insurers, banks and securities firms retreating after rallying on Friday’s Bank of Japan rate hike to a three-decade high.
“Japanese chip-related shares are tracking US peers and lifting the overall market,” and the Nikkei’s outperformance of the Topix is evidence of that, said Wataru Akiyama, a strategist at Nomura Securities.
With trading thinned by holidays in most overseas markets to end the week, big moves in Japanese equities are unlikely, he said.
Japanese markets are open Thursday and Friday as usual.
Advantest rose 1.9% and Tokyo Electron gained 2%.
Furukawa Electric jumped 2.2%.
Chip-sector gains did not translate to bullishness around startup investor SoftBank Group, which lost 1.3%.
Financial companies took most of the bottom spots among the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s 33 industry groups.
Insurance was the worst performer, down 1.4%. Banking dropped 0.8% and securities firms lost 0.6%.
A rebounding yen against the US dollar continued to weigh on the autos sector, which fell 0.8%. Toyota sank 1.1%, as did Subaru.





















Comments