Tokyo equities ended the trading day in negative territory on Monday, with the Nikkei 225 closing down 3.68%. Weakness in the Paper & Pulp, Transport and Communication sectors was cited as the principal driver of the session's losses.
The session's strongest performers on the Nikkei 225 were the following:
- Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd. (TYO:4568) - up 2.00% or 58.00 points, closing at 2,961.00.
- ZOZO Inc (TYO:3092) - up 1.48% or 16.00 points, finishing at 1,097.00.
- Hino Motors, Ltd. (TYO:7205) - up 1.27% or 5.00 points, ending at 400.00.
The session's weakest stocks included:
- Mitsubishi Materials Corp. (TYO:5711) - down 9.35% or 488.00 points, closing at 4,733.00.
- Renesas Electronics Corp (TYO:6723) - down 9.16% or 229.50 points, ending at 2,276.00.
- Ibiden Co Ltd (TYO:4062) - down 8.81% or 728.00 points, finishing at 7,540.00.
Decliners substantially outnumbered advancers on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, with 3,495 stocks falling compared with 255 gaining and 64 ending unchanged.
Market-implied volatility, as measured by the Nikkei Volatility index for Nikkei 225 options, rose 8.11% to 35.07.
Commodity prices moved during the session. Crude oil for May delivery increased 2.42% or $2.38 to $100.61 a barrel. Brent crude for June delivery rose 2.21% or $2.35 to $108.76 a barrel. The June Gold Futures contract fell 8.61% or $396.86 to trade at $4,212.74 a troy ounce.
In foreign exchange trading, USD/JPY was up 0.13% at 159.43, while EUR/JPY was down 0.20% at 183.89. The US Dollar Index Futures moved higher by 0.15% to 99.61.
Key takeaways
- Equities: The Nikkei 225 closed down 3.68% with broad-based selling across the exchange.
- Sectors impacted: Paper & Pulp, Transport and Communication sectors led declines, while a small number of names including Daiichi Sankyo, ZOZO and Hino Motors finished higher.
- Market indicators: Volatility rose, with the Nikkei Volatility index up to 35.07, and market breadth showed heavy downside participation.
Risks and uncertainties highlighted by the session
- Heavy market breadth toward decliners indicates elevated downside risk for equity investors in Japan during the session, affecting broad market exposure.
- Rising implied volatility suggests greater option-implied uncertainty around near-term moves in the Nikkei 225.
- Large moves in commodities and currencies create additional cross-market volatility that can influence corporate costs and investor sentiment in commodities-sensitive and export-oriented sectors.