Tokyo stocks rise
Tokyo stocks rose Monday morning, with gains spurred by the prospect of the Bank of Japan maintaining its ultraloose monetary policy for a while despite speculation that it could change
Tokyo stocks rose Monday morning, with gains spurred by the prospect of the Bank of Japan maintaining its ultraloose monetary policy for a while despite speculation that it could change
After 30 years of economic stagnation, Japan’s economy and stock market are suddenly in the spotlight again. Inflation came back, and Nikkei 225 soared to record highs since the 1990s.
Japan’s Nikkei share average rose more than 1% on Thursday to touch its highest level in a week, as investors were relieved after data showed underlying U.S. inflation remained on
JPMorgan Japan Small Cap Growth & Income plc (LON:JSGI) has declared its ten largest investments in % of total assets as at 31 August 2023: MEC 2.8% Sanwa 2.8% Mitsubishi UFJ Lease
The Nikkei 225 index continued its remarkable comeback on Monday as investors continued allocating their capital to the country. The index, which tracks the biggest companies in Japan, jumped to £33,000 on
Japan’s Nikkei share average advanced to a two-week high on Tuesday, buoyed by overnight gains in Wall Street, although nerves ahead of potentially pivotal U.S. economic data this week limited
Tokyo stocks closed higher on Tuesday, led by heavyweight technology-related shares on Wall Street while issues were also lifted by a weaker yen. Japan’s benchmark Nikkei stock index, the 225-issue
Japan’s economy posted its third straight quarterly expansion, provisional government data showed Tuesday, as robust export growth contributed to an annualized 6% expansion in the second quarter, handily beating market expectations. Economist
According to a Goldman Sachs report, foreign investors bought more Japanese equities than Chinese equities for the first time since 2017 in the first half of this year. In comparison,
The tide has made a decisive turn for the Japanese economy for the first time in more than three decades. After hit by the explosive asset bubble burst in 1990,