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Japan's Nikkei soars to one-year peak on trade deal; bonds slide

Japan's Nikkei soars to one-year peak on trade deal; bonds slide

CNA4 days ago
TOKYO :Japanese automakers led a surge in the Nikkei share average to a one-year peak on Wednesday, after Tokyo reached a trade deal with Washington, ending a months-long stalemate.
Under the agreement, Japanese exports to the United States face a 15 per cent levy, down from a threatened tariff of 25 per cent. Specific duties on autos, which account for more than a quarter of Japan's U.S. exports, also fell to 15 per cent from 25 per cent.
The Nikkei rallied 3.5 per cent to end the day at 41,171.32, its highest close since July last year.
The Tokyo Stock Exchange's transport equipment index soared nearly 11 per cent, with Toyota Motor surging more than 14 per cent.
The clarity on tariffs bolstered the case for the Bank of Japan to resume raising interest rates, lifting short-term Japanese government bond yields.
Longer-term JGB yields also climbed, with local media reporting that embattled Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba was preparing to step down, suggesting a shift in the political landscape towards increased fiscal largesse. Ishiba has denied the reports.
The 10-year yield shot to the highest since 2008 at 1.6 per cent, while a 40-year debt auction garnered the lowest demand since 2011.
The yen weakened about 0.3 per cent to 147.02 per dollar after initially flipping between gains and losses.
"As long as the political situation doesn't deteriorate too much more, we suspect Japan's equity rally has further to run," Capital Economics head of Asia Pacific markets Thomas Mathews wrote in a note.
For the rates market, "our sense is that investors are still underestimating how fast the central bank will hike this year and next," Mathews said.
Ishiba is facing growing opposition from within his Liberal Democratic Party for his vow to stay in power despite the ruling coalition's drubbing in Sunday's election, which resulted in the loss of the coalition's upper house majority.
Opposition parties calling for debt-funded consumption tax cuts made big gains at the polls.
The yield on 40-year JGBs climbed 8.5 basis points to hit 3.46 per cent. Thirty-year yields advanced as much as 6.5 basis points to 3.15 per cent, approaching last week's all-time high of 3.20 per cent.
Two-year yields, which are more sensitive to the monetary policy outlook, jumped 8 basis points to 0.83 per cent, the highest since April 2, when U.S. President Donald Trump shocked markets with his aggressive "Liberation Day" tariff announcement.
Expectations for tighter monetary policy also lifted the TSE's banking index by 4.4 per cent, making it the second-biggest gainer among the bourse's 33 industry groupings.
The central bank will meet on policy next week.
BOJ Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida said on Wednesday that the trade deal greatly reduces uncertainty over the economic outlook, but also warned that risks to activity and prices were skewed to the downside.
"I don't think this (trade deal) alone will lead to a Bank of Japan rate hike next week, but the possibility of a rate hike between September and October has increased," said SMBC chief currency strategist Hirofumi Suzuki.
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Trump, EU's von der Leyen to meet to clinch trade deal
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Trump, EU's von der Leyen to meet to clinch trade deal

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Remote work for Singaporean elders: How a 58 y/o man in SG secured his financial lifeline and retirement needs with just a laptop and Wi-Fi
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Remote work isn't just a lifestyle shift; it's a financial lifeline. For Singapore's pre-retirees and seniors, it's becoming the difference between scaling back or soaring ahead. The traditional model—work till 62, retire on CPF—is buckling under pressure. Today's retirees are living longer, facing higher costs, and often supporting both parents and adult children. It's the 'sandwich generation' crunch, Singapore edition. With CPF's Enhanced Retirement Sum now at S$426,000 and contribution rates increasing slightly for those aged 55–65, some progress has been made. But for many, it's still not enough to fund a 20-30-year retirement. That's where remote work comes in, with a dazzling array of benefits. Why remote work makes dollars and sense 🏦 1. Boosting CPF while you Zoom A 60-year-old who brings in S$4,000 a month remotely for five more years could add over S$50,000 to their CPF account. 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Indian tech company TCS to cut workforce by 2%, affecting more than 12,000 jobs
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Indian tech company TCS to cut workforce by 2%, affecting more than 12,000 jobs

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