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How do you view the recent "hawkish" stance of the Bank of Japan executives? Goldman Sachs: The next interest rate hike may still have to wait until January next year.
Goldman Sachs believes that when evaluating the timing of interest rate hikes, it is important to consider financial market stability and inflation trends. The bank predicts that January next year will be the best time to determine whether Japan's inflation will rebound, and based on this, determine that Japan will raise interest rates in January. However, if there is significant turmoil in the financial markets, the timing of the rate hike may become uncertain.
Nikkei Stock Average Contribution Ranking (pre-close) ~ The Nikkei Average fell for the 7th consecutive day, with Fast Retailing pushing down about 67 yen per share in one stock.
As of the closing of 11 days ago, the number of rising stocks in the Nikkei Average constituent stocks was 32, the number of falling stocks was 192, and the number of unchanged stocks was 1. The Nikkei Average has been falling for 7 consecutive days. It ended the morning session trading at 35,867.33 yen (volume estimated at 840 million 40 million shares), down 291.83 yen (-0.81%) from the previous day. The US market on the 10th was mixed. The Dow Jones Average closed at 40,736.96 yen, down 92.63 yen (-0.23%), and the Nasdaq closed at 17,025, up 141.28 points (+0.84%).
Three points to watch in the afternoon session - the development of the yen's high level, which is disliked since 8 months ago
In the afternoon trade on the 11th, the following three points should be noted: - The Nikkei average has continued to decline for 7 days, and there is a development of aversion to the high yen level for the first time in 8 months - The dollar-yen is weak, staying around 141 yen - The top contributors to the decline are First Retailing <9983>, followed by KDDI <9433> ■ The Nikkei average has continued to decline for 7 days, with aversion to the high yen level for the first time in 8 months. The Nikkei average continued to decline, closing at 35,867.33 yen down 291.83 yen (-0.81%) from the previous day, with an estimated volume of 8040 million shares in the morning session.
The Nikkei Average has fallen for 7 consecutive days, with the Japanese yen at its highest level in 8 months being disliked.
The Nikkei average has fallen for 7 consecutive days. It closed the morning session of trading at 35,867.33 yen, down 291.83 yen (-0.81%) from the previous day (with a volume estimate of 800,400,000 shares). The U.S. market on the 10th was mixed. The Dow Jones average closed at 40,736.96 dollars, down 92.63 dollars (-0.23%), the Nasdaq closed at 17,025.88, up 141.28 points (+0.84%), and the S&P 500 closed at 5,495.52, up 24.47 points (+0.45%). Soft landing.
RBOB gasoline vehicles saw a month-on-month recovery in August, with Dongfeng Honda experiencing a year-on-year decline of over 50% and the overall Japanese brands halting the downward trend.
①Dongfeng Nissan (including Nissan, Qichen, and Infiniti brands) sold 46,479 vehicles, up 5.39% month-on-month and down 24.99% year-on-year. ②Dongfeng Honda sold 23,803 vehicles in August, down 59.67% year-on-year, with a total sales of 275,915 vehicles in the first eight months, a decrease of 19.05% year-on-year.
The Nikkei average started at a decrease of 129 yen, with Tokyo Electric Power Holdings and Nissan Motor Corporation among others falling.
[Nikkei Stock Average・TOPIX (Table)] Nikkei Stock Average; 36029.90; -129.26 TOPIX; 2563.27; -13.27 [Opening Summary] On the 11th, the Nikkei Stock Average opened with a decrease of 129.26 yen to 36029.90 yen, marking the 7th consecutive trading session of decline. The U.S. stock market on the previous day, the 10th, showed mixed results. The Dow Average closed at 40736.96 dollars, down 92.63 dollars, while the Nasdaq ended trading at 17025.88, up 141.28 points. Amid expectations of a soft landing.
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