[東京 17日 ロイター] -
<15:35> 日経平均・日足は「小陽線」、MACDがデッドクロス
日経平均・日足は「小陽線」となった。終値は2万7513円13銭。5日移動平均
線(2万7648円18銭=17日)を終値で下回り、同線が角度を付けて下向きに転じ
ている。ローソク足は「上影陽線」に準ずる形状で、売りサインと捉えらることも可能。
MACDはデッドクロスした。下値リスクに注意が必要となりそうだ。目先は75日線(
2万7308円50銭=同)や200日線(2万7257円53銭=同)が下値めどにな
りそうだ。
<15:20> 新興株はマザーズが反落、米ハイテク株安で売り優勢
新興株式市場は、マザーズ総合が前営業日比1.79%安の766.05ポイントと
反落した。東証グロース市場指数は同1.65%安の976.64ポイントだった。前日
の米市場ではハイテク株比率の高いナスダック総合が1.7%下落しており、国内のグロ
ース株(成長株)の重しになった。
個別では、そーせいグループは4%安と軟調。キャンバスは昨年来
高値を更新する場面もあったが、その後は売りに押されてストップ安で取引を終えた。一
方、ナノキャリアは8.5%高と堅調。I─neは前場で昨年来高値を
更新し12.5%高で取引を終えた。
<13:45> 日経平均は後場にやや下げ拡大、半導体安い 週末前で手控えも
後場の日経平均は前引け時点からやや下げ幅を拡大し、足元は前日比約200円安の
2万7500円台付近で推移している。
指数寄与度の大きい半導体銘柄の下げが重しとなっている。市場では「週末を控えて
いるので積極的には買いづらい。アジア株が軟調なことも圧迫材料」(国内証券のチーフ
ストラテジスト)との声が聞かれた。
東京エレクトロンやアドバンテストは2%安で推移してる。一方、
後場に入りTBSホールディングスが急伸し、9%超高で推移している。
<11:45> 前場の日経平均は反落、米利上げ継続の懸念が重し 円安は支え
前場の東京株式市場で日経平均は、前営業日比159円08銭安の2万7537円3
6銭と、反落した。米国の利上げ継続への警戒感から米株安となったことを嫌気する動き
が先行した。一方、為替がドル高/円安に振れて相場の支えになり、売り一巡後は下げ渋
った。
日経平均は200円超安でスタートした。米国市場で、予想以上に強い米卸売物価指
数(PPI)や米連邦準備理事会(FRB)高官のタカ派発言を受けて利上げ継続などの
観測が高まり株安となったことを嫌気する動きが先行した。
米フィラデルフィア半導体指数(SOX指数)の下落を受けて半導体関連株が軟調だ
った一方、前日に値動きがさえなかった銀行株は小じっかりだった。
朝方の売り一巡後は、ドルが134円台へと徐々に上昇する中、下値では押し目買い
も入って下げ渋った。輸送用機器など輸出関連株の一角は、ドル高/円安に連れて下げ幅
を縮める場面もあった。
米金利の先高警戒感はくすぶるが、「米金利が上昇しても、円安なら日本株はさほど
下げない。目先はレンジをキープした値動きになりそうだ」(SMBC日興証券の太田千
尋投資情報部部長)との見方が聞かれた。
TOPIXは0.44%安の1992.20ポイントで午前の取引を終了した。東証
プライム市場の売買代金は1兆3535億3600万円だった。東証33業種では、値上
がりはゴム製品や鉄鋼、水産・農林業など12業種で、値下がりは鉱業や電気機器、精密
機器など21業種だった。
決算が好感されたブリヂストンや、三菱ケミカルグループが堅調。
トレンドマイクロはしっかりだった。一方、東京エレクトロンは軟調。
エムスリーは昨年来安値を更新した。
東証プライム市場の騰落数は、値上がりが560銘柄(30%)、値下がりは119
1銘柄(64%)、変わらずは82銘柄(4%)だった。
<10:28> 日経平均は下げ幅縮小、円安が支え 米株先物の値動きに関心
日経平均は下げ幅を縮小している。朝方から為替がドル高/円安方向に振れる中、業
種別では輸送用機器が一時プラスに浮上し、機械が下げ幅を縮小するなど、円安が相場の
支えになっている。
一方、時間外取引の米株先物が軟調に推移しており、投資家心理の重しになっている
。足元では下げ渋っているが「引き続き目配りが必要」(国内証券のストラテジスト)と
いう。
前日に決算を発表したブリヂストンが堅調。業種別でゴム製品が上昇率トッ
プ。このほか、鉄鋼、銀行業など15業種が値上がりし、鉱業や海運業、サービス業など
18業種が、値下がりしている。
<09:05> 日経平均は反落スタート、米利上げ継続への警戒感が重し
寄り付きの東京株式市場で日経平均は、前営業日比211円84銭安の2万7484
円60銭と、反落してスタートした。米国市場が利上げ継続への警戒感から株安となり、
嫌気する動きが先行した。その後は下げ幅を縮めている。
主力株はトヨタ自動車が小安く、ソニーグループは軟調。半導体関
連は総じて弱く東京エレクトロンは小安い。一方、三菱UFJフィナンシャル・
グループは小高い。
<08:26> 寄り前の板状況、アクシージアが買い優勢 GMOグローバルサイ
ン・HLDは売り優勢
東証プライム市場の寄り前の板状況では、買い優勢と売り優勢のそれぞれ上位銘柄群
は以下の通り。
買い優勢
銘柄名 騰落 MID 買気 売気 終値
率 気配 配 配
1 アクシージア 22% 1,69 1,69 1,69 1,39
0 0 0 0
2 アドウェイズ 18% 647 647 647 547
3 ジェイ・エス・ビー 6% 4,20 4,20 4,20 3,97
0 0 0 0
4 きんでん 5% 1,54 1,54 1,54 1,47
5 4 5 3
5 SMN 4% 480 479 480 460
6 関電工 4% 900 899 900 866
7 加藤製作所 4% 875 874 875 844
8 トレンドマイクロ 4% 6,50 6,50 6,51 6,28
5 0 0 0
9 加藤産業 4% 3,84 3,84 3,85 3,71
8 5 0 5
10 東名 3% 2,35 2,34 2,35 2,27
0 9 0 7
売り優勢
銘柄名 騰落 MID 買気 売気 終値
率 気配 配 配
1 GMOグローバルサイン・HL -17% 3,51 3,51 3,52 4,21
D 8 5 0 5
2 リニカル -12% 636 635 636 726
3 ネクソン -9% 2,80 2,80 2,80 3,07
1 0 1 5
4 アルゴグラフィックス -7% 3,67 3,67 3,67 3,94
3 0 5 5
5 三菱総合研究所 -6% 4,88 4,88 4,88 5,21
3 0 5 0
6 メイコー -5% 2,73 2,73 2,73 2,87
4 4 4 6
7 ヨシムラ・フード・HLDG <2 -5% 952 951 952 997
884.T>
8 コプロ・HLDG -5% 1,15 1,15 1,15 1,20
1 0 1 5
9 ダブル・スコープ -4% 1,33 1,33 1,33 1,39
6 5 6 2
10 日進工具 -4% 1,02 1,02 1,02 1,06
6 5 6 7
(
Equities Markets
Kuroda relaxation and market: The effect of high stock prices due to yen depreciation is diminishing, “cleaning up” of remaining ETFs | Reuters
TOKYO (Reuters) – The Nikkei 225 Stock Average has increased by about 2.5 times in the decade since the Bank of Japan implemented large-scale easing under Governor Haruhiko Kuroda. Many believe that the weaker yen, which was the biggest factor in the early stages of easing, has now lost its effect on rising stock prices. The purchase of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) worth 50 trillion yen on a market price basis also supported Japanese stocks, but the next BOJ governor will have a heavy task of cleaning up the aftermath.
Quantitative and qualitative monetary easing, nicknamed “bazooka”. Even before its introduction in April 2013, expectations for easing led to a weaker yen and higher stock prices. The market was abuzz.
The Nikkei Stock Average climbed about 30% from 12,400 yen at the end of March 2013 to 16,300 yen at the end of December 2013. The depreciation of the yen was the driving force. The dollar/yen exchange rate was around 94 yen at the end of March 2013, but fell by about 10 yen to 105 yen in January 2014.
According to SMBC Nikko Securities, the net profits of TOPIX companies whose fiscal year ends in March increased by about 70% in the fiscal year ended March 2014. Although the stock price hike was preceded by market expectations, it was accompanied by the “substance” of improving corporate performance, and the weaker yen tended to directly cause the stock price to rise.
An increase in share buybacks also contributed to the rise in stock prices. “As corporate financial conditions improve, more companies are using their surplus funds to buy back their own shares,” says Masahiro Nakamura, chief researcher at the Daiwa Institute of Research.
However, the relationship between the depreciation of the yen and high stock prices has changed completely. In 2022, the yen depreciated from 115 yen to the dollar in early spring to 151 yen to the dollar in October, but the Nikkei Stock Average in the same year fell by 9%. By industry, the weaker yen is not necessarily a factor in the rise in stock prices, regardless of individual stocks, such as electrical machinery and transportation equipment.
The difference is in business performance. According to SMBC Nikko Securities, the net profit forecast for TOPIX companies in the fiscal year ending March 2023 is expected to increase by 1.2%, remaining almost flat. Looking at the April-December period, by industry, the manufacturing industry saw a 6% decline in profits, showing that corporate earnings have been tough even under the yen’s depreciation.
Overall, not a few economists see the yen’s depreciation as a positive for the Japanese economy. It can also be said that the depreciation of the yen prevented corporate earnings from falling sharply. However, as inflation progresses worldwide, the depreciation of the yen has a strong negative effect, increasing the burden of import costs such as raw materials.
Looking at Toyota Motor’s consolidated operating income, the foreign exchange had a positive effect of 900 billion yen in the fiscal year ended March 2014. In the April-December quarter of 2010, it was a positive 1.045 trillion yen, and the effect of the weaker yen is still significant. However, the soaring cost of materials had a negative effect of 1.1 trillion yen, which was the main reason for the 17% decline in profits.
In the stock market, the depreciation of the yen is not as favorable as it used to be. Masahiro Ichikawa, chief market strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui DS Asset Management, said, “Amidst the accelerated rise in resource prices since the corona crisis, the weaker yen was perceived as one of the causes of higher costs, and it became difficult to directly affect stock prices.” Point out.
Last year, while monetary tightening progressed in the United States, the yield curve control (YCC) policy kept yen interest rates low. Yen depreciation or yen appreciation? Exchange rates are not the Bank of Japan’s policy objective, but delicate steering is required because they are factors that have a large impact on the economy and prices.
<“Difficulties” Remaining for the New Governor>
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are also a point where attention will be paid to the response of the next governor of the Bank of Japan. It was former Governor Masaaki Shirakawa who initiated the purchases by central banks, which is unusual even in the world, but Governor Kuroda greatly expanded the scale.
The amount was initially set at 450 billion yen during the Shirakawa presidency, but was increased to 1 trillion yen with Bazooka 1 in April 2013, and 3 trillion yen with Bazooka 2 in October 2014. In March 2020, it was raised to 12 trillion yen (upper limit).
The Bank of Japan cites lower risk premiums as the purpose of buying ETFs. The idea is that if the risk premium is lowered, money will circulate, leading to an increase in prices. “Looking at the yield spread, we could see the effect of reducing the risk premium only for a short period of time immediately after the increase in the purchase limit,” said Shingo Ide, chief equity strategist at NLI Research Institute.
On the other hand, in the market, dependence trading methods such as TOPIX’s rate of decline in the front market as a criterion for triggering the BOJ’s ETF buying were also conspicuous.
Norihiro Fujito, chief investment strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities, commented on the BOJ’s buying of ETFs, saying, “For the time being, investors are only buying ETFs and have no plans to sell them. There is.”
The outstanding balance of ETFs acquired by the Bank of Japan so far is about 50 trillion yen. The amount of purchases in 2022 was only 630 billion yen, and it seems that they are starting to take a “distance”, but if they turn to selling, it could have a big impact on the market. A difficult task remained for the next governor of the Bank of Japan.
(Noriyuki Hirata, Hiroko Hamada, Nobuyo Saito Edited by Daiki Iga)
* Change the heading tag, add a category and resend.
Correction-today’s stock outlook = solid, supported by yen depreciation Bank of Japan revision caution continues | Reuters
(予想レンジの水準を「2万6600円―2万6900円」から「2万7600円―2万
7900円」に訂正します)
[東京 7日 ロイター] - きょうの東京株式市場で日経平均株価は、底堅い
展開が想定されている。前日の米国市場では雇用統計後の金利上昇傾向が続いて株価は下
落したが、ドル高/円安となったことが日本株を支援しそうだ。日銀の政策修正に対する
過度な警戒感が緩和する地合いが継続するとみられている。
日経平均の予想レンジは2万7600円―2万7900円。(訂正)
前営業日終 昨年来高 昨年来安
値 値 値
日経平均 27693.65 29388.16 24681.74
+184.19 2022/01/0 2022/03/0
5 9
シカゴ日経平均先物 27685(円建
当限 て)
Companies with PBR below 1x, TSE requests disclosure of improvement measures | Reuters
[Tokyo, 26th Reuters]-The Tokyo Stock Exchange will target the prime and standard markets in the spring of 2023, and will disclose efforts and progress toward improvement to companies whose price-to-book ratio (PBR) continues to fall below 1. I showed the policy to request. The Tokyo Stock Exchange presented a “proposal” on the 25th to an expert panel to verify the market restructuring.
In order to encourage companies to make efforts to improve corporate value over the medium to long term, the Tokyo Stock Exchange will request disclosure of policies, specific efforts, progress, etc. for improvement as necessary. In particular, it said it would “strongly request disclosure” from companies that have consistently fallen below 1 times the value of liquidation.
Focus: Japanese stocks wary of rising interest rates, long-term 1% Nikkei 1800 yen depreciation also estimated | Reuters
TOKYO (Reuters) – The Japanese stock market has become more cautious about rising interest rates. Although speculation about additional policy revisions by the Bank of Japan has receded temporarily, the level of yen interest rates remains high. While bank stocks, which benefit from rising interest rates, have risen conspicuously, looking at stock prices as a whole, stock prices tend to be relatively overvalued compared to government bonds, etc., and downward pressure on stock prices tends to increase due to the strong yen. It is estimated that if long-term interest rates rise to 1%, the Nikkei Stock Average will drop more than 1,800 yen.
Shingo Ide, Chief Equity Strategist at NLI Research Institute, said that if Japan’s long-term interest rate rises from 0.4% to 1% on the 20th, the Nikkei average will be 1,836 yen and TOPIX will be 134 if other conditions remain unchanged. It is estimated that downward pressure will be applied to each point.
When the Bank of Japan expanded the permissible fluctuation range of long-term interest rates from 0.25% to 0.5% on December 20, 2018, the Nikkei Stock Average fell 1,520 yen in about two weeks, and the TOPIX fell 67 points. Meanwhile, the US Dow has risen by 512 dollars, and there is a possibility that the impact of the rise in interest rates, including the appreciation of the yen, was large.
In Japan, the low interest rate environment continued over the past decade due to the large-scale monetary easing by the Bank of Japan, so awareness of the relationship between interest rates and stock prices was low. However, as BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s term of office is approaching in April, there are speculations that the monetary policy framework will change, such as yield curve control (YCC).
“In the future, the Japanese stock market may become aware of the yield spread,” said a fund manager at a domestic asset management company. The yield spread is the difference between the yields of bonds and stocks. Generally speaking, if it narrows, stocks will become more expensive, making it easier to shift funds from high-risk stocks to bonds.
Stock prices are not determined solely by their relationship with interest rates. If interest rates rise against the backdrop of an economic recovery, stock prices may rise as they factor in improvements in corporate earnings.
In 2006, when Toshihiko Fukui was governor of the Bank of Japan, it moved to end quantitative easing and to end zero interest rates. Interest rates rose from the beginning of the year as the market priced in monetary tightening, but stock prices rose in tandem with the economic recovery trend.
After the collapse of Lehman Brothers, a different dimension of monetary easing began under Bank of Japan Governor Kuroda, and yen interest rates followed a long-term declining trend. “If the dent in the yield curve is only smoothed out, the economy and stocks will not be significantly adversely affected,” said Yoshinori Shigemi, macro strategist at the Fidelity Institute.
The PER of the Nikkei average and TOPIX as of the 20th is about 12 times, both at the lower end of the range of the past 10 years, and the sense of cheapness is conscious. “Even if the BOJ makes some moves, there will be a short-term decline in stock prices, but there will be no major collapse,” said Jun Ishigane, chief strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Kokusai Asset Management.
On the other hand, in the United States, interest rates and stock prices are highly correlated in a situation where interest rate hikes are feared. Last year, the S&P 500 and 10-year U.S. Treasury yield spread narrowed to minus 2.3% in early spring. The stock price has deepened its adjustment in conjunction with the interest rate hike by the US Federal Reserve Board (FRB).
The Fed’s interest rate hikes narrowed to 0.5% in December from 0.75% last year, four times in a row. The next rate cut is likely to fall further to 0.25%, and some forecast a rate cut in the second half of the year. At the same time, however, there is concern about an economic recession in the second half of the year, and it is unclear whether the suspension of monetary tightening will lead to higher stock prices.
The strong yen is a cautionary factor for Japanese stocks through the US market. Even if the rise in yen interest rates is small, if the rise in US interest rates slows down or declines, it will double as a factor for yen appreciation (dollar depreciation).
From March to October last year, when the yen weakened, the S&P 500 fell 12.8%, but the TOPIX fell only 0.8%. On the other hand, since October, when the yen has appreciated, TOPIX has risen by 2.3% while S&P has risen by 5.8%.
Yutaka Miura, a senior technical analyst at Mizuho Securities, said interest rates had a strong impact on stock prices through exchange rates. In a period of strong yen, it is unavoidable that Japanese stocks will be subordinated to US stocks.
(Edited by Noriyuki Hirata: Daiki Iga)
Bank of Japan Decision Meeting: Future policy revision direction, progress of yen depreciation is limited = Mr. Ichikawa, Sumitomo Mitsui DSAM | Reuters
[Tokyo 18th Reuters]-
Although the market’s view was that there would be no change in policy, the result was within expectations, but there was a smoldering view that the volatility range would expand again. The yen reacted with a large depreciation. In the future, there are many views that the monetary easing will basically be revised, and I don’t think the yen will continue to depreciate further from here.
It is still unclear whether the expansion of joint collateral operations will improve market functions. For the time being, it is a form of expanding fund supply means, but it is uncertain whether the bond market will settle down. Despite the fact that the long-term interest rate fluctuation range was expanded to 0.5% last month, the situation has become more severe than when it was 0.25%, but this time the status quo will be maintained. I would like to pay attention to how the Governor of the Bank of Japan explains it.