Market Updates
Tokyo Stocks Drop 2%
123jump.com Staff
18 Sep, 2007
New York City
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Nikkei 225 in Tokyo fell 2% after global credit market worries resurfaced. The broader index Topix declined 2.2%. Mizuho Financial and Aiful Corp plunged 8% after a local lneder Credia filed for bankruptcy protection. Credia filed for protection after it failed to raise financing for its 54 billion yen debt. Sony lowered size of its IPO of the financial unit. Discount retailer Seiyu Ltd raised its forecast of loss for the year.
[R]6:00AM New York, 7:00PM Tokyo - Financial stocks led the decline in Tokyo. Demand for services and retail sales fell in July as typhoons and declining disposable incomes take their toll. Yen firms as investors reduced holdings on high-yielding assets funded by loans from Japan.[/R]
Japanese stocks traded in the red, dragged down by financial stocks on resurgent fears that the credit market turmoil will affect global financial markets. The drop in demand for retail services and sales for July also dampened market sentiment. Of the 225 Nikkei stocks, 14 gained, 197 declined while 14 traded unchanged. Of the index stocks, 63 shed more than 2%.
In Tokyo trading the benchmark Nikkei 225 plunged 2.2% or 325.62 to 15,801.80. Financial stocks led the decline coupled by waning investor sentiment after The Ministry of Trade announced that demand for retail services had slipped for the month of July on bad weather and falling disposable incomes. Statistics from the trade ministry showed the tertiary index, which measures the amount households and businesses spend on services slumped 0.5% from June.
Notwithstanding the 9-year low jobless rate, falling disposable incomes caused by wages that have been falling every month this year, and slipped the most in 3 years in July, took their toll on sales. Retail sales for the month of July plunged 2.2%. Household spending fell for the first time this year. Consumer confidence and consumer spending fell to a 2-year low as the Topix index declined 3.9% in July. Since then the index has plummeted by 10% and sentiment is bearish over the outlook period.
Investors also turned to Japanese government bonds on strengthening yen and expectations that the Bank of Japan will keep a hold on the interest rates. The yield on the benchmark 10-year bond was down around half a basis point at about 1.540%. Fears that the turmoil on the credit markets will persist led the yen higher against the major currencies. The yen firmed 0.7% against the New Zealand dollar to 80.82 and against the pound by 0.4% for the third day to 228.63. Against the euro and the dollar, the yen also rose to 159.31 and 114.96 respectively.
Of the Nikkei 225 index shares, financials led the downtrend as investor’s confidence in banks fell, prompted by a run on deposits at UK mortgage lender Northern Rock and warning by the Bank of America. Mizuho Financial, Japan’s second biggest lender slipped 7.61% followed by Mitsubishi UFG edging down 7.34%. Commercial bank Resona Holdings also slipped by 6.47%. Ferokawa Electrical and Mitsui Trust Holdings anchored the five decliners at 6.39% and 6.36 respectively.
Canon led the advancers in the index, climbing 2.17%. Mitsumi Electrical edged up 40 or 2.06%. Sumitomo Chemicals and Shionogi soared 1.94% and 0.84% in that order. Matsushita Electric Work, fifth largest gainer in the index with a rise of 0.68%.
Inpex failed to buck the downtrend despite the record increase of oil to more than $80 per barrel, 24-year record. The oil company shed 0.88% at the close of trade.
Gold also touched a 16-month high at $728.90 per ounce on the New York Merchantile Exchange.
Japanese consumer lender Credia, which is 21% owned by JCB, filed for bankruptcy after is faced difficulty in raising capital and repaying debt amounting to 56.5 billion yen.
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