
Japan's Nikkei Stock Average Buoyed by Weak Yen as Trump Tariff Deadline Delayed
The Nikkei .N225 gained 0.2% to 39,679.13 as of 0220 GMT. The broader Topix .TOPX added 0.1%.
On Monday, Trump began telling selected trade partners that they will see higher tariff rates from August 1, with the original three-month moratorium on 'Liberation Day' reciprocal levies expiring on Wednesday. Japan will now see a rate of 25%.
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said his administration would continue negotiations with the White House to seek a mutually beneficial bilateral deal. Initially touted by Trump's team as a likely early success, talks with Tokyo remain stalled for weeks, largely over a 25% tariff on Japanese auto imports.
'It's very clear that it be will very difficult' to overcome the obstacles to an agreement on autos, said the chief macro strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui DS Asset Management, Masayuki Kichikawa, who sees the 25% duty on the sector sticking.
Japan's best outcome would be a lowering of the universal 25% rate to the baseline 10% the U.S. is levying on all trading partners, he said.
According to Kichikawa, 'there is no choice other than to wait and see' for now as the July 20 Japanese upper house elections leave Ishiba's team little room to show flexibility in trade negotiations until after the result.
Japanese stocks rose on the day even after the tariff announcements, which also included South Korea along with a host of smaller nations, sent Wall Street sliding from record highs.
Japan's heavyweight exporters were supported by a sharply weaker yen, with Trump's new tariff rates spurring a broad rally in the U.S. currency overnight. A weaker yen inflates the value of overseas revenues.
The chip sector was a standout, with Advantest 6857.T gaining 2.2% and Furukawa Electric 5801.T jumping 7.7%.
Automakers advanced, with Mazda 7261.T climbing 2.5% and Toyota 7203.T up 0.5%.
However, shares of embattled Nissan 7201.T slumped for a third day, shedding an additional 2.9%.
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