This year, the Japanese stock market has experienced a significant rally, surpassing even the highs of 1989.
This outcome has been welcomed as one of the clearest signs that decades-long efforts by politicians to improve the efficiency of the $4 trillion economy were finally bearing fruit.
However, currently, the Nikkei 225 and Topix indices are leading a sharp global sell-off of stocks.
This drop will reveal how much substance lies beneath the surface of the Asian country’s stock market.
A global shift in interest rates is underway, reshaping fund managers’ risk appetite.
The Bank of Japan is increasing borrowing costs while the Federal Reserve signals potential rate cuts as early as September.
Weak US employment data published last Friday fuels fears of a sharp economic slowdown.
The yen’s appreciation is weighing down stocks, especially those of Japanese companies generating about 20% of their revenues from overseas.
The country’s benchmark indices have dropped by as much as 15% in the past week, roughly four times more than their US counterparts.
The stock market decline will ultimately determine if the Tokyo government and stock exchange officials have built a resilient market through reform initiatives.
Their efforts to push companies to focus on high-yielding assets, dispose of underperforming ones, and reduce cash reserves seem to be paying off.
A major question is where the yen will stabilize.
Though its decline has become a source of national anxiety, a too rapid appreciation could interfere with the Bank of Japan’s plans, affecting more than just stocks.
The weakness of the currency has kept import prices high, supporting inflation above the central bank’s 2% target.
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