November 2, 2006
Nikkei, Topix each drop 2.2 percent
Permalink: Nikkei, Topix each drop 2.2 percent
Filed under: Equities, Economy, Asia, Japan
The Tokyo equities markets were lower on Thurdsay, with both the Nikkei 225 and the Topix index dropping 0.2 percent, to 16,350.02 and 1,619.02 respectively. Both export-focused and domestic sectors were instrumental in the declines.
Stocks in technology sectors were hit by bad news out of the United States, including declines in the semiconductors sector and weak manufacturing figures for October. Advantest dropped 1 percent to ¥5,750. In the electronics sector, Matsushita dropped 1.6 percent to ¥2,415, while Pioneer fell 2.9 percent to ¥1,791. Camera manufacturer Canon, meanwhile, was 0.5 percent lower to ¥6,280.
Sectors related to metals were lower on dropping prices for raw materials, as both the non-ferrous metals and metals products sectors were 0.4 percent lower on the session. Sumitomo Metal Mining dropped 1.4 percent to ¥1,530.
The real estate sector was 0.5 percent lower as a whole, with Mitsui Fudosan falling 0.7 percent to ¥2,860.
Gainers included Suzuki Motor, which added 2.4 percent to ¥3,420 on a positive quarterly report and an upgraded full-year prediction.
Bridgestone was even on the day at ¥2,445 on a report of a decline of 34 percent in operating profits in the third quarter. Higher raw materials prices were to blame. The tire maker’s share price was initially lower after the report, but an unchanged full-year forecast helped regain the losses.
October 25, 2006
Tokyo markets see losses
Permalink: Tokyo markets see losses
Filed under: Equities, Economy, Asia, Japan
Weakness in the consumer finance and securities sectors sent the Tokyo equities markets lower on Wednesday. The Nikkei 225 dropped 0.5 percent to 16,699.30, while the Topix index fell 0.6 percent to 1,653.38. There were losses in a number of other sectors as well.
In the telecommunications sector, NTT DoCoMo was down 2.2 percent to ¥180,000. Softbank dropped 2.5 percent to ¥2,590. The declines came as investors were wary of a possible price war among mobile phone carriers. KDDI, on the other hand, added 1 percent to ¥735,000 after declines on Tuesday.
The electronics sector saw declines as well, with NEC 6 percent lower to ¥639 on the announcement that it will abandon US accounting standards and use Japanese rules, which are less demanding, instead. The move came after it did not file its report for the quarter ending in March on time with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
Consumer finance companies were hurt when Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party dropped a plan that would have let the lenders charge more than the maximum allowable interest on some loans. Acom dropped 4.9 percent to ¥4,490, while Takefuji fell 5 percent to ¥4,520 and Aiful was 7.2 percent lower to ¥4,140.
The securities sector was 3.2 percent lower as a whole, with Nomura dropping 2.5 percent to ¥2,165 as investors worried about what its quarterly report would reveal. Their fears were borne out when the securities house’s report showed that profits were down by 28.5 percent in its second quarter. Daiwa Securities, meanwhile, fell 4.1 percent to ¥1,381.
October 17, 2006
Profit-taking hits Tokyo markets
Permalink: Profit-taking hits Tokyo markets
October 12, 2006
Banks decline in Tokyo
Permalink: Banks decline in Tokyo
Filed under: Equities, Economy, Asia, Japan
Declines in the banking sector sent the Tokyo equities markets lower on Thursday, with the Nikkei 225 dropping 0.2 percent to 16,368.81 and the Topix index down 0.5 percent to 1,613.64. Consumer finance companies, however, saw gains on the session.
In the consumer finance sector, Takefuji added 0.9 percent to ¥4,630, while Jaccs was 4.1 percent higher to ¥890 and Aiful advanced 4.4 percent to ¥4,020. Despite the gains in the sector, it was still down for the week.
Canon dropped 2.4 percent to ¥6,510 on a downgrade from “buy” to “hold” from Deutsche Bank, making the cut on the basis of the printer and copier maker’s rising share price. Sony, however, was 1.8 percent higher to ¥4,590 after its joint project with Ericsson to make mobile phones posted much better than expected results in the third quarter.
The banking sector saw declines on the session, falling 2.3 percent as a whole after UBS cut the ratings of several of Japan’s largest financial institutions. The reason given for the downgrades was that spreads between deposits and lending rates have not been improving quickly enough. SMFG dropped 1.6 percent to ¥1,240,000, while Mizuho Financial fell 2 percent to ¥906,000, Mitsubishi UFJ was 3.2 percent lower to ¥1,530,000, and Sumitomo Trust and Banking was off by 4.6 percent to ¥1,248.
These declines were partly offset by a 1.3 percent rise in the non-ferrous metals sector after metals prices increased. Sumitomo Metal Mining added 3.5 percent to ¥1,463.
October 4, 2006
North Korea nuclear stance hurts Tokyo markets
Permalink: North Korea nuclear stance hurts Tokyo markets
Filed under: Equities, Economy, Asia, Japan
The Tokyo equities markets were lower on Wednesday after North Korea again said that it is planning on testing a nuclear device at some point. The Nikkei 225 and the Topix index each dropped 1 percent to 16,082.55 and 1,601.99 respectively. The Mothers index of small and mid-cap stocks did even worse, falling 2.1 percent to 1,180.36.
Falling commodity prices were also a factor in declines, as commodity-related stocks were down on the session. Upstream oil company Inpex was 2.1 percent lower to ¥873,000, while downstream oil company Cosmo Oil dropped 3.4 percent to ¥458. Nippon Mining, which both smelts copper and refines oil, fell 5.6 percent to ¥778.
The electronics sector was also lower. Matsushita Electric Industrial, the world’s biggest consumer electronics manufacturer, declined 1.3 percent to ¥2,515, while Sony fell another 3.3 percent to ¥4,450 after Tuesday’s announcement that it will not launch its Blu-ray optical disc recorder in Japan until December, a month after Matsushita introduces its version.
The worries over Korea’s nuclear program also hit the banking sector. Mitsubishi UFJ dropped 0.7 percent to ¥1,500,000 and Mizuho was 1.3 percent lower to ¥900,000. In the real estate sector, meanwhile, Mitsui Fudosan was up 0.4 percent to ¥2,695 and Mitsubishi Estate added 1.5 percent to ¥2,655, but Nomura Real Estate, which began trade on Tuesday, was 1.9 percent lower in Wednesday’s session to ¥4,040.
October 2, 2006
Tokyo gains on strong Tankan survey
Permalink: Tokyo gains on strong Tankan survey
Filed under: Equities, Economy, Asia, Japan
In Tokyo on Monday, equities markets were higher after the latest Tankan Survey by the Bank of Japan. The Nikkei 225 was 0.8 percent higher to 16,254.29, while the Topix index gained 0.9 percent to 1,625.12.
Some export-oriented stocks were also helped by a weaker yen. Matsuhsita Electric Industrial was 1.2 percent higher to ¥2,530. On the other hand, Sony was hurt by yet another recall of its laptop batteries, dropping 1.1 percent as a consequence, to ¥4,730. Carmakers were higher, with Toyota Motor up 1.1 percent to ¥6,490 and Honda Motor adding 2.5 percent to ¥4,070.
Metals manufacturers were up substantially on the session. Nippon Steel was 1.7 percent higher to ¥494, while JFE gained 1.9 percent to ¥4,720. Among non-ferrous metals makers, Dowa added 2.2 percent to ¥1,041.
In the telecommunications sector, KDDI was 1.8 percent higher to ¥749,000 on reports that it will purchase Tokyo Electric Power’s fibre optics unit. Tepco was up 0.9 percent to ¥3,430.
The real estate sector was 1.4 percent higher. Mitsui Fudosan added 0.7 percent to ¥2,705, while Mitsubishi Estate gained 2.7 percent to ¥2,650.
Elsehwere, the paper and pulp sector was mixed as Oji Paper managed a gain of 0.2 percent to ¥648, but Hokuetsu Paper was 0.4 percent lower to ¥714.
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