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Nikkei average contribution ranking (pre-opening) ~ Nikkei average rebound, TDK pushed up about 43 yen per share by one stock.
As of the closing of the 16th, the number of rising stocks among the Nikkei average constituent stocks was 138, falling stocks were 84, and unchanged stocks were 3. The Nikkei average rebounded. It closed the morning session at 41,399.72 yen (+0.51%) which was 209.04 yen higher than the previous trading day (approximate volume of 810 million 10 thousand shares traded). On the 15th, the US stock market continued to rise. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 210.82 dollars (+0.53%) to 40,211.72 dollars, and the NASDAQ rose by 74.12 points (+0.40%) to 18,472.
Three points to watch in the afternoon session - Trump rally strengthens, including defense-related developments.
In the afternoon of the 16th, we want to focus on the following three points in trading: ・Nikkei Average rebounded, Trump rally strengthened in defense-related sectors ・Dollar-yen is solid, due to relief in U.S. interest rates ・Top contributors to price increases were TDK <6762> and Toshiba Elex <8035>. ■Nikkei Average rebounds, Trump rally strengthens in defense-related sectors Nikkei Average rebounds. It closed at 41,399.72 yen (volume approx. 810 million shares) during morning trading, up 209.04 yen (+0.51%) from the previous business day.
The Nikkei average rebounded, with a development that Trump Rally strengthened, including defense-related industries.
The Nikkei average rebounded. It closed the morning trading at 41,399.72 yen (+0.51%) higher than the previous day’s trading volume of approximately 810 million shares. On the 15th, the US stock market continued to rise. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 210.82 points (+0.53%) to 40,211.72, the NASDAQ rose by 74.12 points (+0.40%) to 18,472.57, and the S&P 500 rose by 15.87 points (+0.28%) to 5,631.22 at the end of trading. After the assassination attempt incident, the
Nikkei Average Contribution Ranking (Before Closing) - Nikkei Average rose for the third consecutive day, with First Retail pushing up about 62 yen with one stock.
As of the close of 11 days ago, the number of rising stocks in the Nikkei average constituent stocks was 178, the number of falling stocks was 45, and the number of unchanged stocks was 2. The Nikkei average has risen for three consecutive days. It closed the morning session at 42,179.84 yen (+0.83%), up 347.85 yen from the previous day (with an estimated trading volume of 910 million shares). The US stock market rose on the 10th. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 429.39 points (+1.09%) to 39,721.36, and the Nasdaq rose 218.16 points (+1.18%) to 18,647.
Three points to watch in the afternoon session - with high-tech stocks rising, the price temporarily rose to the 42,400 yen level.
In the afternoon trading on the 11th, we want to focus on the following three points. ・The Nikkei average has risen for three consecutive days, rising to the 42,400 yen range at one point due to the high-tech stock surge. ・The dollar-yen exchange rate is strong, and Japanese stocks continue to rise. ・The top contributors to the price increase are First Retail<9983> and second is Tokyo Electron<8035>. ■ The Nikkei average has risen for three consecutive days, rising to the 42,400 yen range at one point. The Nikkei average has risen for three consecutive days, up 347.85 yen (0.83%) from the previous day to 42,179.84 yen (estimated volume of about 910 million10 thousand shares).
The Nikkei Average rose for the third consecutive day and temporarily rose to the 42,400 yen range with the high-tech stock rise.
The Nikkei Average has risen for 3 consecutive days, and closed the morning trade at 42,179.84 yen (volume approximately 910 million 10 thousand shares), up 347.85 yen (+0.83%) from the previous day. The US stock market on the 10th rose, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 429.39 points (+1.09%) to 39,721.36 dollars, the Nasdaq up 218.16 points (+1.18%) to 18,647.45, and the S&P500 up 56.93 points (+1.02%) to 5,633.91 at the close. Powell, the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.
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