Tuesday, 24 December 2013

Nikkei holds near 6-year high as US data bolsters optimism - Reuters

Tue Dec 24, 2013 9:21pm EST

  * Upbeat U.S. manufacturing data boosts sentiment      * Retail investor buybacks expected after tax-related sales      * Buying a bit speculative, broader market softer        By Hideyuki Sano      TOKYO, Dec 25 (Reuters) - Japan's Nikkei share average rose  on Wednesday, clinging near a  six-year peak hit the previous  day, supported by optimism towards the global economy and hopes  for fresh buying by Japanese retail investors due to upcoming  tax changes.      The Nikkei was up 0.2 percent at 15,922.33 in  morning trade, near the six-year intraday high of 16,029.65 hit  on Tuesday, after stronger-than-expected U.S. manufacturing data  helped Wall Street shares finish at record highs.      U.S. durable goods orders for November surged on rising  demand for goods across a spectrum of industries, pointing to  strength in the economy.       "Trading volume is below average because of winter holidays  but we don't really have negative factors at the moment. The  market could rally in the final days of year," said Soichiro  Monji, chief strategist at Daiwa SB Investments.      The market was also supported by hopes that Japanese retail  investors who have sold stocks before a rise in the capital  gains tax may soon be buying back shares.       Japan will double the capital gains tax to 20 percent on  Jan. 1 but Wednesday is the effective deadline to benefit from  the lower tax rate, because transactions on Thursday will be  settled next year.      Even if investors do not start buying back immediately, any  tax-related selling will subside from Thursday, potentially  giving a boost to the market, market players said.      Traders are also pinning hopes on buying from new tax-free  investment accounts, dubbed NISA, for the Nippon Individual  Savings Account, which launch on Jan. 1. The government has  introduced the scheme to lure more Japanese savings to shares to  bolster the economy.       Japanese stocks have enjoyed a record-breaking rally this  year, backed by Tokyo's aggressive fiscal and monetary stimulus  aimed at sparking sustainable growth in the world's  third-largest economy.      The benchmark Nikkei is up 53 percent this year, on track  for its best annual rise since 1972.      But buying appeared to be led by speculative accounts on  Wednesday, traders said, as they concentrated on a small number  of index heavyweights such as Fast Retailing, which  rose 2.8 percent.      The broader Topix index was down 0.3 percent at  1,254.17, with volume at less than 40 percent of the full daily  average for the past 90 trading days as of midmorning.      Food maker Nippon Meat Packers jumped 3.7 percent  after a rating upgrade by Goldman Sachs.      Softbank fell 1.1 percent following a media report  that it is in the final stages of talks with T-Mobile   parent company Deutsche Telekom about acquiring the  U.S.-based wireless carrier.  



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