Historic breakthrough reflects multiple tailwinds

​The Nikkei 225 has crossed the 44,000 threshold for the first time, briefly reaching 44,185 before easing back. The move reflects a confluence of supportive factors, with markets pricing in both domestic and external tailwinds.

​Optimism around stimulus and trade has been a critical driver, reinforcing Japan’s position as one of the stronger performers among developed equity markets this year.

​This milestone represents a significant achievement for Japanese equities, which have outperformed many international peers.

​The breakthrough above this psychologically important level demonstrates renewed confidence in Japan’s economic prospects and policy direction among both domestic and international investors.

​Leadership race shapes policy expectations

​The resignation of former prime minister Shigeru Ishiba has shifted attention toward Sanae Takaichi, now viewed as a leading contender in Japan’s leadership race. Investors interpret her policy stance as pro-growth, with an emphasis on fiscal expansion and accommodative monetary policy.

​This perception has translated into stronger appetite for risk assets, as markets bet on continuity in supportive conditions rather than a tightening bias that could constrain economic growth.

​Market participants appear confident that the incoming leadership will maintain policies that support both domestic demand and corporate profitability across key sectors of the Japanese economy.

​Trade resolution removes key uncertainty

​At the same time, Japan’s trade outlook has been buoyed by progress with the United States. Confirmation that US tariffs on Japanese autos will be lowered by mid-September has helped remove lingering uncertainty from July’s deal.

​This resolution is strategically important for Japan’s export-heavy economy, particularly the auto sector, which has been facing pressure from both global supply chain challenges and geopolitical tensions.

​The automotive industry remains a cornerstone of Japanese manufacturing and exports, making the tariff resolution particularly significant for investor sentiment toward Japanese industrial stocks.

​This development provides greater visibility for Japanese companies’ export earnings and removes a potential headwind that had created uncertainty about future trade relationships.

​Technology sector provides momentum leadership

​Technology stocks provided additional momentum, led by a more than 7% surge in Advantest, while Screen Holdings, Tokyo Electron, and Sony all tracked gains in US tech peers.

​This sector leadership underscores the sensitivity of Japanese equities to global semiconductor and electronics cycles, with Japanese technology companies benefiting from their integral role in global supply chains.

​The correlation with US technology performance demonstrates how interconnected global markets have become, particularly in sectors where Japanese companies maintain technological leadership or crucial supply chain positions.

​Semiconductor equipment companies like Tokyo Electron have been particular beneficiaries of AI-driven demand for advanced chips, supporting both their individual performance and broader market sentiment.

​Global monetary policy backdrop supports Asian equities

​Beyond Japan, the broader Asian equity complex also found support from expectations of US monetary easing. A September Fed rate cut is increasingly seen as likely, with some market participants even speculating on a 50-basis-point move.

​This global backdrop of looser liquidity conditions further strengthens the case for sustained equity market resilience in the region, as lower US interest rates reduce the relative attractiveness of dollar-denominated assets.

​The prospect of Federal Reserve (Fed) easing creates supportive conditions for risk assets globally, with particular benefits for markets like Japan that have historically been sensitive to global liquidity conditions.

​Sector rotation and market breadth

​The Nikkei’s advance has been supported by broad-based participation across multiple sectors, suggesting that the rally has solid foundations rather than being concentrated in a few large-cap names.

​Financial stocks have benefited from expectations of continued monetary accommodation, while industrial companies have gained from both trade resolution and improving global demand expectations.

​Consumer-focused companies have shown resilience amid signs of domestic economic stabilisation, providing evidence that the recovery is gaining traction across different segments of the Japanese economy.

​The breadth of participation suggests that the current rally reflects genuine improvement in fundamentals rather than speculative momentum concentrated in specific sectors or themes.

​Nikkei 225 front month futures technical analysis

​The Nikkei 225, up over 10% year-to-date, has briefly risen above its previous August record high to above the psychological 44,000 mark but ended the day slightly lower on profit taking.

​On the daily front month futures chart a high of 44,190 was reached, marginally above its mid-August 43,930 then record high, before closing below both levels.

​Nikkei 225 September daily futures candlestick chart