Home News Tokyo shares slip on US-China trade war worries

Tokyo shares slip on US-China trade war worries

0
231

A stock indicator shows share prices of the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo on August 2, 2018. Tokyo stocks slipped on August 2 tracking drops on Wall Street as Washington threatened to raise tariffs on Chinese goods. / AFP PHOTO / Kazuhiro NOGI

Organic Creame

Tokyo stocks sank more than one percent Thursday, joining broad selloffs in Asia on growing concerns about a trade war after Washington said it was considering raising the rate of threatened tariffs on Chinese goods.

The benchmark Nikkei 225 index lost 1.03 percent, or 234.17 points, to end at 22,512.53, while the broader Topix index gave up 1.00 percent, or 17.67 points, at 1,752.09.

Traders were spooked after US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said he was considering hiking proposed tariffs to 25 percent from a planned 10 percent on $200 billion of Chinese imports.

The development fuelled fresh fears about a full-blown trade war between the world’s top two economies.

“Concerns over US-China trade relations were reignited as the Tokyo market opened led by sell orders,” said Okasan Online Securities in a commentary.

“Some buying was seen among firms that had healthy earnings. But once Chinese shares opened lower, the Nikkei also began to fall,” it said.

Investors are left guessing about how the crisis will play out, with some worrying that with both sides digging in there could be more pain down the line, but others saying Trump is playing tough as a negotiating tactic.

“Investors are worried as they don’t know whether the (US-China) trade war is escalating or the countries are actually looking for a compromise plan,” said Masayuki Kubota, chief strategist at Rakuten Securities.

“While concerns about the global economy linger, however, there are some buybacks for companies whose earnings are good but are priced low,” providing support for the market, he added in a commentary.

In Tokyo trade, selling hit companies with close business ties with China.

Machinery maker Komatsu fell 3.66 percent to 3,239 yen and factory robot-maker Fanuc gave up 3.17 percent to 21,665 yen.

Sony, which upgraded its annual earnings forecast this week, enjoyed healthy gains most of the trading day before coming under selling pressure to end the day up 0.2 percent at 6,117 yen.

The dollar was trading at 111.63 yen against 111.62 yen in New York Wednesday.

Source: G Business

Latest News
Kill Terrorists, Bandits Instantly, Defence Minister Urges Security Agencies, Says Insecurity To Become History SoonRethinking How Nigeria Supports SME GrowthFrom Nutrition To National Security: A Governance Lesson In Coordination & OwnershipStanbic IBTC Capital Named Nigeria's Best Investment Bank at 2026 Global Banking and Finance Review AwardsNNPC Seals Six Gas Deals To Boost Industrialisation, Energy SecuritySenate Queries N943m Allowances Paid to North-West Development Commission BoardStanbic IBTC Bank's Economic Forum Charts Nigeria's Path Through A Shifting Global EconomyTHE YEWA AWORI SOCIO-ECONOMIC BLUEPRINTS FOR THE YAYI ERA AND BEYONDEMHF Opens Heritage Event Hall, Unveils Vision For Africa’s Premier Music Heritage CentreNigeria’s Youngest Chartered Accountant, 16-Year-Old Danielle Osasere, Honoured At MFM Prayer CityThe Kick Of A Dying Horse: Rejecting The Retrogressive Agents Of Darkness In YEWA-AWORI LandNigerians Must Embrace Production, Entrepreneurship To Become Great- Emir of DutseTASFUED Holds Formal Investiture Ceremony for Sixth Substantive Vice-ChancellorOlodo Uprising: Carter Efe mirrors our collective disaster“I’m No Fraudster” — Adeyemi Fires Back at Presidency Over PFIPC Controversy