November 22, 2024
Japan’s stock market crashes – what it means for investors #JapanFinance

Japan’s stock market crashes – what it means for investors #JapanFinance

CashNews.co

Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida has given up. Beset by public anger about cost-of-living pressures and a party corruption scandal, Kishida has announced that he will not seek re-election as leader of the country’s governing party. He is expected to step down next month. Change at the top of Japanese politics comes as the local stock market recovers from a bruising sell-off, which saw the Nikkei fall 12.4%, its biggest one-day drop since 1987.

Japanese shares suffered their worst two-day drop since the 1950s, says River Akira Davis in The New York Times. The plunge could mark the end of one of the country’s “most enduring stock rallies” in decades. The benchmark Topix index has gained 36% since the start of last year amid excitement about corporate reform. Yet the speed of the drawdown – which came after the yen strengthened – has left many asking if Japan’s much-vaunted revival was just an illusion driven by currency weakness. The weak yen boosts the earnings of big listed multinationals, such as Toyota.