Tokyo equities rallied to close firmly in positive territory on Monday, driven by sector-wide strength in Real Estate, Banking and Textile shares. At the close in Tokyo the Nikkei 225 rose 5.33% to reach a new all-time high, reflecting broad buying across the market.
Among individual issues, Taiyo Yuden Co., Ltd. (TYO:6976) was the session's top performer on the Nikkei 225, jumping 22.64% - an increase of 3,560.00 points to finish at 19,285.00. Ibiden Co Ltd (TYO:4062) added 19.08%, or 3,645.00 points, to close at 22,750.00, while SUMCO Corp. (TYO:3436) rose 17.85%, gaining 652.00 points to end the day at 4,305.00.
Not all names advanced. CyberAgent Inc (TYO:4751) was the worst performer on the index, slipping 5.06% or 69.00 points to 1,295.00 at the close. Kikkoman Corp. (TYO:2801) dropped 3.65%, losing 59.50 points to finish at 1,569.50, and Nitori Holdings Co Ltd (TYO:9843) declined 3.25%, or 87.50 points, to 2,603.00.
Market breadth favored buyers: advancing issues outnumbered decliners on the Tokyo Stock Exchange by 2,402 to 1,163, with 208 issues unchanged.
Shares in Taiyo Yuden Co., Ltd. (TYO:6976) moved to new record levels as part of the broader rally, closing at an all-time high of 19,285.00, up 22.64% or 3,560.00.
Measures of market volatility eased alongside the rally. The Nikkei Volatility index, which gauges implied volatility in Nikkei 225 options, fell 2.46% to 37.28.
Energy and commodity futures moved in the opposite direction to the equity advance. Crude oil for July delivery declined 5.16%, down $4.38 to $80.50 a barrel. Brent oil for August delivery fell 4.48%, losing $3.91 to $83.42 a barrel. In metals, the August Gold Futures contract rose 2.12%, gaining $89.96 to trade at $4,328.76 a troy ounce.
On the currency front, USD/JPY was down 0.06% at 160.13, while EUR/JPY rose 0.27% to 185.86. The US Dollar Index Futures slipped 0.24% to 99.25.
Market context - The rally produced pronounced divergences across individual stocks: several industrial and materials names posted double-digit percentage gains, while some consumer-facing and internet-related companies retreated. Commodity prices, particularly crude and Brent oil, moved lower on the session, and implied volatility for the Nikkei edged down.
What to watch next - Continued breadth and whether commodity price moves and currency fluctuations influence earnings expectations for exporters and domestic consumer names.