Key Takeaways
-Nikkei 225 trades near 65,079 after recent record highs, showing a pause in momentum.
-Profit-taking in technology shares slows the rally, while Topix shows milder losses.
-Market breadth supports a rotation rather than broad sell-off, with decliners slightly outnumbering advancers.
-Asian markets reflect a more cautious sentiment after previous risk-driven rallies.
-Oil remains a key swing factor for Japanese equities due to import dependence.
-Support is seen near 64,500–63,200; resistance around 65,500–66,000.
Japan’s share market paused for a second consecutive day after the Nikkei 225 hit record levels in the previous session. Traders reassessed the speed of the rally, with early trading showing the index slipping slightly while Topix also moved lower.
Although the Nikkei remains near 65,000, caution dominates after the benchmark’s prior jump of 2.2% to 66,428.81. Market participants are now more selective, waiting to see if valuations, particularly in technology stocks, remain justified.
Technology Profit-Taking Drags
Technology and semiconductor-linked shares led the softer tone in the Nikkei, as investors locked in gains after a strong AI and chip-driven rally. Analysts note that the pace of the rally has left some valuations ahead of earnings momentum. Market breadth showed 103 advancers against 120 decliners, signaling a mild rotation rather than a broad sell-off. Traders remain in the market but are increasingly cautious at high price levels.
Regional Mood Turns Cautious
The wider Asian market mirrored Japan’s more balanced sentiment. Following a risk rally driven by falling oil prices and hopes of US-Iran peace talks, traders now seek more concrete evidence that supply risks are easing.
Japan, heavily dependent on imported fuel, benefits quickly from lower oil prices, which support margins and household demand. However, much of the relief is already priced in, making sector leadership more important than broad optimism for the next phase.
US and Oil Headlines Influence, But Less Dominant
Global developments, including US actions and oil market news, remain influential for the Nikkei but have become supporting factors rather than primary drivers. Technology shares also softened due to profit-taking after gains in AI and chip sectors.
Renewed US military activity in Iran could still impact oil prices, influencing corporate margins and consumer spending in Japan. Oil risk remains the swing factor that could determine whether traders continue buying at high levels.
Technical Analysis
The Nikkei 225 remains above key short-term moving averages (MA5, MA10, MA20), reflecting a medium-term bullish structure. The index’s recent pullback from 65,320 appears more like consolidation after the breakout from the 62,000–63,000 region rather than a reversal.
Learn more about the factors behind the Nikkei’s short-term consolidation in this article below.