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The Nikkei average fell by 1164 yen, while the Dow futures remained firm and supported the Tokyo market's stock prices.
The Nikkei average has dropped by 1164 yen (as of 1:50 pm). In terms of the Nikkei average contribution, SoftBank Group <9984>, Toshiba <8035>, Advantest <6857>, etc. are among the top negative contributors, while Nitori Holdings <9843>, Bandai Namco Holdings <7832>, Olympus <7733>, etc. are among the top positive contributors. In sectors, electric appliances, insurance, securities and commodity futures, machinery, and services industries have a higher decline rate, while aquatic and agricultural forestry, pulp and paper, and air transportation sectors have seen growth.
Nikkei Average Contribution Rank (Pre-market): The Nikkei Average fell sharply for the seventh consecutive day, with SoftBank Group pushing down about 154 yen per share in one stock.
As of the close of business 25 days ago, the number of rising stocks out of the Nikkei average constituent stocks was 60, the number of falling stocks was 164, and the number of unchanged stocks was 1. The Nikkei average fell significantly for the seventh consecutive day. At the end of the morning trading session, the Nikkei average closed at 38,165.19 yen (approximately 1,040 million shares), down 989.66 yen (2.53%) from the previous day. The U.S. stock market continued to fall, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down 504.22 dollars (1.25%) to 39,853.87 dollars, and the Nasdaq down 654.94 points (3.64%) to 1734.
Three key points to focus on in the afternoon: High-tech stocks fell sharply, temporarily dropping to the 37,000 yen range.
In the trading of the afternoon of the 25th, we want to pay attention to the following three points. - The Nikkei average fell significantly, with hi-tech stocks plummeting, and at one point it hit the 37,000 yen range. - The dollar-yen plunged significantly, led by yen purchases. - Top contributors to the price decline are SoftBank Group <9984> and Tokyo Electron <8035>. The Nikkei average fell significantly for 7 consecutive days, with hi-tech stocks plummeting, and at one point it hit the 37,000 yen range. It was 989.66 yen lower than the previous day (-2.53%).
Nikkei average fell significantly for the seventh consecutive day, and in the process of sharp decline of high-tech stocks, it temporarily dropped to the 37,000 yen range.
The Nikkei average fell sharply for the seventh consecutive day. At the end of the morning session, it was 38,165.19 yen (with a volume of approximately 1,040 million shares traded), down 989.66 yen (-2.53%) from the previous day. The US stock market continued to decline. The Dow Jones fell 504.22 points (-1.25%) to 39,853.87 dollars, the Nasdaq fell 654.94 points (-3.64%) to 17,342.41, and the S&P 500 closed at 5,427.13, down 128.61 points (-2.31%). Some of the high-tech...
Nikkei average started with a 630 yen decrease, with Disco and Kawasaki Heavy among the decliners.
[Nikkei Average and TOPIX (chart)] Nikkei Average: 38,524.20, -630.65; TOPIX: 2,753.38, -39.74. The Nikkei Average opened at 38,524.20 yen, down 630.65 yen for the 7th consecutive trading day on 25th. On the previous day, the US stock market also fell. Dow Inc. fell 504.22 dollars to 39,853.87 dollars, while NASDAQ fell 654.94 points to 17,342.41. Some high-tech companies had poor earnings.
Sell pressure is waiting for the return to 0.04 million yen.
The Nikkei average fell for the fifth consecutive business day, although slightly. Trading closed at 39,594.39 yen, down 4.61 yen (with a volume estimate of 1,308,000,000 shares). The previous day's US market saw buying of high-tech stocks leading to a rebound in major stock indexes, so in the Tokyo market, high-impact values of the index were prioritized for buying back in high-tech stocks. The Nikkei average rose to 39,927.89 yen immediately after the start of trading. However, there were waiting sellers near the psychological threshold of 40 million yen and expectations of the Bank of Japan's policy normalization, causing a retreat.
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