No Data
No Data
Adjustment of positions in the background of falling Western stocks and rising gold prices.
The Nikkei average continued to decline, closing at 38,721.66 yen, down 654.43 yen (with an estimated volume of 2.3 billion 40 million shares) in trade. Reflecting the decline of major stock indexes in the previous day's European and American markets, selling pressure for position adjustments took precedence. Although there were scenes of the Nikkei average recovering into positive territory immediately after the opening, the rebound trend did not strengthen. In the middle of the morning session, it fell below the milestone of 39,000 yen and breached the 25-day moving average at the same level. After the selling wave subsided, there was also observed a hesitant decline around the 25-day moving average.
Nikkei average significantly continued to decline, strongly aware of caution towards the upcoming Trump administration.
On the 12th, the US stock market fell. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 43,910.98, down 382.15 points, and the Nasdaq closed at 19,281.40, down 17.36 points. With cautious sentiment near record highs, the market was mixed after the opening. Lack of new buying factors, profit-taking sales pressure due to temporary high achievement, and the market turned lower. Throughout the day, concerns about the improvement in economic outlook and the easing speculation of interest rate cuts against the background of rising long-term interest rates, the market remained soft. To be continued tomorrow.
Discussions are underway to privatize as a countermeasure against the &iHD acquisition.
It has been reported that the management team of the Canadian convenience store giant Alimentation Couche-Tard is considering a management buyout (MBO) in response to the acquisition proposal. It is also reported that discussions are underway to privatize the company's shares as a countermeasure against the acquisition. It seems that funding for the MBO is being considered to be raised from the founding family, as well as from three major banks and Itochu Corporation <8001>. Speculative funds are likely to be concentrated once trading resumes.
Daiwa House, landlords, etc. (additional) Rating
Upgrade - Bullish Code Stock Company Previously Changed -------------------------------------------------- <5110> Sumitomo Rubbers GS "Hold" "Buy" Downgrade - Bearish Code Stock Company Previously Changed -------------------------------------------------- <8056> BIPROGY City "2" "3" Target Stock Price Change Code Stock Name
The Trump trade is also swayed by favorable and unfavorable factors.
The Nikkei average fell for the first time in three business days. It closed at 39,376.09 yen, down 157.23 yen (approximate volume of 2.460 million shares) in trading. Against the backdrop of the previous day's rise in US stocks and a weaker yen, buying took the lead in the morning. There were moments of increase up to 39,866.72 yen towards the end of the morning session. However, there is a tendency for selling to wait for a return before the psychologically significant milestone of 100,000 yen, and US media reports Trump's strong stance on countries such as China and Iran as the top diplomat in the upcoming US presidential administration Marco Rubio.
The Nikkei average fell for the first time in three days, raising awareness of caution towards the future Trump administration.
On the 11th, the US stock market continued to rise. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 44,293.13, up 304.14 points, while the Nasdaq ended trading at 19,298.76, up 11.99 points. Buying continued on expectations of deregulation and priority on growth policies under the upcoming Trump administration, leading to an increase after the opening. Subsequently, with the bond market closed due to Veterans Day holiday causing a lack of material news, there was a rotation where small-cap stocks were bought while high-tech stocks were sold, leading to a temporary decline in the Nasdaq. The Dow remained strong throughout the day.