
Japanese markets ends at 6-month high
Japanese markets ended at a six-month high amid hopes the U.S. will extend the deadline for reciprocal tariffs.
The Nikkei average jumped 1.43 percent to 40,150.79, marking its highest closing level since December 27. The broader Topix index settled 1.28 percent higher at 2,840.54.
Technology stocks followed their U.S. peers higher, supported by positive news around easing tensions in the Middle East and expectations for Fed rate cuts this year. Tokyo Electron surged 4.3 percent and SoftBank Group rallied 2.5 percent.
Defense-related Kawasaki Heavy Industries soared 6.2 percent on expectations of increased defense spending in the country.
Automakers Honda, Toyota and Nissan all gained around 3 percent, tracking a weaker yen as Tokyo's CPI data for June 2025 revealed a milder inflation trajectory than anticipated.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Telangana schools body calls for fee hike based on CPI; TRSMA urges grade-wise slabs, expert panel in fee regulation bill
The Telangana Recognised School Managements Association (TRSMA), representing 10,000 unaided private schools, has proposed annual fee hikes based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) to the state government HYDERABAD: The Telangana recognised school managements association (TRSMA), representing nearly 10,000 unaided private schools across the state, submitted a set of proposals to the govt on the draft 'Telangana private schools and junior colleges fee regulation and monitoring commission' Bill. A delegation from TRSMA, led by its office-bearers, participated in a meeting convened by the state department of education and chaired by the chief minister's adviser, K Keshava Rao. In their representation, TRSMA urged the govt to allow annual fee hikes based on the consumer price index (CPI), citing precedents from states such as Rajasthan, Gujarat, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, and Bihar. You Can Also Check: Hyderabad AQI | Weather in Hyderabad | Bank Holidays in Hyderabad | Public Holidays in Hyderabad They also recommended grade-wise fee slabs, pre-primary, primary (classes 1-5), upper primary (classes 6-7), and high school (classes 8-10), to ensure a fair, transparent structure aligned with academic stages. Speaking to TOI, P Raghavendra Reddy, Treasurer of TRSMA, expressed concerns over the proposed composition of the fee regulation committee. "According to the draft bill, the committee will include one representative from the school management, five teachers, and four parents," he said. He added that while parents naturally seek lower fees, the committee should also include individuals with expertise in fee regulation to ensure balanced decision-making.


Mint
2 hours ago
- Mint
Stocks are flying, the Dollar is falling, tariffs haven't hit yet. Why cut rates now?
As 2025 nears its halfway point, a latter-day Rip Van Winkle who might have been napping since the start of the year might think not much had changed. The S&P 500 index, while closing at a new high on Friday, was up an unremarkable 5%. That, of course, obscures the dramatic swings in between, with a near bear-market 19% decline from February to the lows after the Trump administration's April 2 Liberation Day tariff announcements. Then came an equally dramatic rebound following a pause in tariffs and a retreat from triple-digit levies threatened for China. But mainly, the first half gave rise to the investment meme of 'Nothing ever happens," insofar as the stock market is concerned. Trade wars and the uncertain impact of tariffs on the economy; fiscal fights over the Big, Beautiful tax bill that resulted in the U.S. losing its last triple-A credit rating; and conflicts in the Middle East, including the U.S. bombing of Iranian nuclear sites on June 22. After all of that, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite are ending the first half at record highs. Forget about the proverbial 'wall of worry" that bull markets supposedly ascend. The new belief, 'Nothing ever happens," is actually relevant to stocks and helped induce individual investors to buy the steep dip in April and May, putting a lie to all the hand-wringing. By halftime, the mood had swung back to FOMO, or fear of missing out. What hasn't changed is the Federal Reserve's policy stance. And yet, despite an ebullient equity market, an accommodative credit market, and a sharply lower dollar—all signs of easy financial conditions—the president has harangued Fed Chair Jerome Powell for failing to slash its federal-funds target range, which has been held at 4.25% to 4.5% since December. In congressional testimony this past week, Powell reiterated uncertainty about the effect on prices from tariffs, which mostly haven't hit yet. As EY-Parthenon Chief Economist Gregory Daco explains, their impact has been blunted by the front-loading of imports before the levies hit; use of bonded warehouses and foreign trade zones, which can delay tariff payments until goods enter the U.S.; temporary cost absorption by importers; lags in measuring tariff pass-throughs; and absorption of costs by exporters. Goldman Sachs economists expect just a one-time inflation boost from tariffs, raising the year-over-year core personal consumption expenditure index (excluding food and energy) to 3.4% in December, significantly higher than the 2.7% increase in the latest 12 months for the Fed's preferred inflation gauge reported on Friday. Brean Capital economic advisors John Ryding and Conrad DeQuadros note that the most recent CFO survey, conducted by Duke University and the Richmond and Atlanta Feds, found 41% planned to hike prices while 30% said they would absorb tariff cost increases in the next year. Goldman's inflation forecast is well above the Fed's 2% target, making it difficult to justify cutting rates now. Yet two Fed governors, Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman, have said they would consider rate cuts if inflation is stable. The fed-funds futures market is pricing in two cuts of a one-quarter percentage point each by year end, with a 74.8% probability of the first move in September, according to the CME FedWatch site. Given the uncertain course of tariffs and their inflation impact, the more likely spur for a rate cut would be a deterioration in the labor market. That will put the monthly jobs data to be released in the coming, holiday-shortened week in the markets' focus. The consensus guess among economists is for a 125,000 rise in nonfarm payrolls in June, down slightly from May's 139,000 increase, with the headline unemployment rate continuing to hold steady at 4.2%. Deutsche Bank economists estimate it may take only a monthly payroll increase of 100,000 to keep the jobless rate steady, below the average gain of 124,000 in the first five months of the year, because of slower labor force growth. With no net immigration flows, only a monthly payroll rise of 60,000 would keep the unemployment rate flat. With deportations, just 40,000 payroll gains would be at break-even. Given the surge in retirements by baby boomers, RBC Capital Markets Senior U.S. Economist Michael Reid writes that the U.S. needs more workers rather than more jobs. While the labor-force participation rate is historically low at 62.4%, for the prime working age cohort it's near a record high of 83%. Retirees, meanwhile, provide a spending tailwind out of their savings and accumulated wealth. At record highs, the stock market provides support for these spenders, along with interest income that had been lacking during the zero-rate era. At the same time, credit markets attest to the financial strength of the corporate sector, writes John E. Silvia, the former chief economist at Wells Fargo. Along with tight corporate bond spreads, the S&P 500's record close indicates easy financial conditions. In particular, new highs in banks and financials point in the same direction. The one big change since the beginning of the year has been the dollar, which has declined by a sharp 10%, yet another easing in overall financial conditions. All of which makes calls for Fed rate cuts puzzling. Write to Randall W. Forsyth at


Economic Times
3 hours ago
- Economic Times
Masayoshi Son hints at succession plan while chasing AI ambition
Reuters SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son Masayoshi Son acknowledged the outlines of a succession plan at SoftBank Group Corp., addressing what may be investors' single biggest concern regarding the long-term future of the Japanese said he plans to hold SoftBank's reins another ten years, but added he has several candidates for its next chief in mind from within the technology group. The candidates work alongside the billionaire every day, although he hasn't disclosed who they are to anyone, the 67-year-old said during a general shareholders' meeting in Tokyo on Friday. Son fielded repeated questions from shareholders worried about a SoftBank without its charismatic leader or a succession plan. The chief executive officer responded that he's healthy and intends to continue to lead and aim to realize an era where artificial intelligence is pervasive in society. 'I look forward to seeing a successor grow as quickly as possible so that I can appoint them, but I still have some passion left and want to keep at this,' he said. Son added, however, that he's mentally prepared to hand over the reins at any time, should he stand in the way of SoftBank's mentioned the head of telecom unit, Junichi Miyakawa, who is in charge of rolling out AI infrastructure within Japan and widely seen as an example of how others in the company can lead as Son shifts his focus elsewhere. Miyakawa is doing 'an extremely solid job,' Son said. 'I feel very pleased, encouraged and reassured by his efforts. As a result, I have almost never felt the need to interfere in what he does. I trust him.'SoftBank's shares rose to close up 2.5%, buoyed by a broader rally that boosted the Nikkei Stock lieutenants who have been officially or unofficially in the running to be Son's successor have included Nikesh Arora, Marcelo Claure and Katsunori Sago. All have left shareholder even asked if AI would either extend Son's lifespan or make it possible for Son to somehow remotely control the company from beyond the grave. Son responded by saying that while he intends to use AI 'more than anyone,' he didn't see it replacing annual shareholders' meeting has long been a platform for Son to share his vision of a future of tech-driven progress. Many investors have hung onto his words and their shares from before the dot-com boom and asked about SoftBank's ability to finance big bets such as the Stargate data center projects, and Son's ability to deliver on his goals to lead in an age of such project is a partnership with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. to build a large AI manufacturing hub in Arizona, Bloomberg reported earlier. Son said he's now cornered key artificial intelligence chip architecture and seeks to become the world's top platform by the time AI surpasses human abilities — or what he and other AI proponents call artificial super-intelligence. 'We want to become the world's top platformer for ASI,' he said, adding that it'll be a winner-take-all arena. SoftBank controls chip designer Arm Holdings Plc and plans to invest as much as $30 billion in ChatGPT maker OpenAI. 'These are indispensable for ASI,' he said, noting also that SoftBank has acquired Graphcore Ltd. and has plans to buy Ampere Computing LLC. 'I'm all in.' Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. The bike taxi dreams of Rapido, Uber, and Ola just got a jolt. But they're winning public favour Second only to L&T, but controversies may weaken this infra powerhouse's growth story Punit Goenka reloads Zee with Bullet and OTT focus. Can he beat mighty rivals? 3 critical hurdles in India's quest for rare earth independence HDB Financial may be cheaper than Bajaj Fin, but what about returns? Why Sebi must give up veto power over market infra institutions These large- and mid-cap stocks can give more than 23% return in 1 year, according to analysts Are short-term headwinds from China an opportunity? 8 auto stocks: Time to be contrarian? Buy, Sell or Hold: Motilal Oswal initiates coverage on Supreme Industries; UBS initiates coverage on PNB Housing