Japanese markets have been whipsawed by developments in the Middle East. Japan, which depends on the region for about 95 per cent of its oil imports, has seen the yen come under pressure and bond yields rise amid concerns that higher crude prices could lift import costs.
The Bank of Japan is holding a two-day policy meeting ending on Tuesday. It is widely expected to raise its policy rate to a 31-year high of 1 per cent and signal its readiness to keep pushing up borrowing costs.
In equities, despite geopolitical turmoil, strategists have been bullish on Japanese stocks on a wave of optimism over AI investment and the fruit of corporate governance reforms pushed by the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The Nikkei is up about 31 per cent for the year.
NLI’s Ide said the blue-chip index could temporarily rise to 70,000, but that level looks rich relative to fundamentals and would need additional positive drivers, such as a full reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, to hold.
“The valuation for Japanese equities is still low but there is caution for the Nikkei’s current level,” said Hiroyuki Ueno, chief strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Asset Management.
“Today’s gain is probably partly led by demand for short covering. There are some investors who must buy Japanese stocks today. But market players who are long on Japanese stocks would not scoop up stocks at this high.”
On Monday, all but two of 33 industry sub-indices of the Tokyo Stock Exchange rose. There were 198 advancers on the Nikkei index against 27 decliners.
The largest percentage gainers in the Nikkei index were Murata Manufacturing which was up 17.2 per cent, followed by Ibiden gaining 16.8 per cent. The biggest losers were CyberAgent, down 3.3 per cent, followed by Kikkoman, which lost 3.2 per cent.


