EBC Markets Briefing | ​Japanese stocks climb to fresh peaks

On September 11, the Nikkei 225 hit a record high, driven by Fed rate cut expectations, SoftBank's surge, and Berkshire Hathaway's larger stake in Japanese firms.

Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 notched a record high on Thursday, mirroring gains on Wall Street overnight on Fed-rate cut hopes and positive inflation data.

SoftBank Group, jumped nearly 10% to notch a second straight day of gains after a Wall Street Journal reporting that OpenAI struck a roughly $300 billion, five-year cloud-computing deal with Oracle.

Berkshire Hathaway holding company raised its holdings in five Japanese trading houses by more than 1 percentage point each, to stakes ranging from 8.5% to 9.8%, according to a regulatory filing.

The strategy involves hedging currency risk by selling Japanese debt and then pocketing the difference between dividends from the investments and the bond coupon payments he has to make to service the debt.

It marks a resurgence of optimism in the market. Foreign investors were net sellers of Japanese stocks in the week to 20 August, for the first time in nine weeks, as they moved to lock in profits.

US tariffs on Japanese goods including cars and auto parts are set to be lowered by September 16, tariff negotiator Ryosei Akazawa said on Tuesday. But he added trade talks have not been "settled".

The Nikkei index has breached the major threshold of 44,000, which could pave the way for further gains. We view 45,000 as the next potential psychological resistance level.

EBC Financial Group Disclaimer: This material is for general information purposes only and is not intended as (and should not be considered to be) financial, investment or other advice on which reliance should be placed. No opinion given in the material constitutes a recommendation by EBC Global Financial Collaboration or the author that any particular investment, security, transaction or investment strategy is suitable for any specific person.

EBC Financial Group
Type: STP, ECN
Regulation: FCA (UK), ASIC (Australia), CIMA (Cayman Islands)
read more
Yen intervention risk rises, US jobs concerns intensify

Yen intervention risk rises, US jobs concerns intensify

Japan’s Katayama highlights negative impact of weak yen - US labor market concerns increase chance of December Fed cut - Soft UK jobs report takes BoE rate cut probability higher - Stock futures rise; gold extends rebound despite broader optimism
XM Group | 28 minutes ago
Pound Succumbs to Pressure from Weak Labour Data

Pound Succumbs to Pressure from Weak Labour Data

The GBP/USD pair snapped a four-day winning streak, declining for a second day to trade around 1.3135. The sell-off was triggered by UK labour market data revealing a rise in unemployment and a deceleration in annual wage growth.
RoboForex | 1h 34min ago
WTI Steadies Above $60 as Reopening Hopes Rise | 12th November 2025

WTI Steadies Above $60 as Reopening Hopes Rise | 12th November 2025

Global markets edged higher as optimism over a U.S. government reopening lifted risk sentiment. Oil steadied above $60, supported by improving demand, while Gold and the Yen softened amid reduced safe-haven demand. The USD gained modestly, with traders eyeing upcoming U.S. CPI and Fed commentary for fresh policy cues.
Moneta Markets | 5h 1min ago