
Japans Nikkei gains on weaker yen; chip shares cheer TSMC earnings
The Japanese currency sank as much as 0.5% against the U.S. dollar, sliding towards Wednesday's 3-1/2-month nadir. A weak currency boosts the value of overseas revenues for heavyweight exporters.
Meanwhile, TSMC reported results that topped analyst forecasts during the Tokyo Stock Exchange's afternoon session. It undid some of the pessimism from Dutch chip-making tool supplier ASML's revenue warning, which had weighed on Japanese chip shares in the morning.
The tech-heavy Nikkei ended the day up 0.6% at 39,901.19, reversing earlier declines of as much as 0.7%.
The broader Topix rose 0.7%.
Silicon producer Sumco was the Nikkei's biggest percentage gainer with a 7% jump. AI-focused start-up investor SoftBank Group was the biggest support in index-point terms with a 2.3% increase.
Heavily weighted chip-testing machinery maker Advantest was the Nikkei's biggest drag after dropping 0.8%. Chip-making equipment manufacturer Lasertec was another standout loser, with a 4.8% tumble.
ASML warned on Wednesday that it may not achieve revenue growth in 2026 as chipmakers building factories in the U.S. await clarity on the potential impact of tariffs.
For Japanese peers, "quarterly orders are likely to fluctuate but, based on the 12-month moving average, orders have not yet entered a recovery phase, similar to ASML," Jefferies analysts wrote in a research note on Wednesday.
Orders for extreme ultraviolet lithography equipment, a key component in chipmaking, have been "stalled" since increasing "sharply" in the first half of last year, although a recovery is likely in 2026, they said.
The Nikkei's biggest decliner in percentage terms was Seven & i Holdings, which slumped 9.2% after Canada's Alimentation Couche-Tard ended its takeover bid for the operator of the 7-Eleven convenience store chain.
The worst performer among the 33 Topix industry groupings was the mining sub-index, which includes oil explorers, which sank 1.0% with Brent oil languishing below $70 a barrel this week. The oil and coal sub-index lost 0.8%.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

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


Mint
12 minutes ago
- Mint
SoftBank and Open AI's $500 billion AI project struggles to get off ground
A $500 billion effort unveiled at the White House to supercharge the U.S.'s artificial-intelligence ambitions has struggled to get off the ground and has sharply scaled back its near-term plans. Six months after Japanese billionaire Masayoshi Son stood shoulder to shoulder with Sam Altman and President Trump to announce the Stargate project, the newly formed company charged with making it happen has yet to complete a single deal for a data center. Son's SoftBank and Altman's OpenAI, which jointly lead Stargate, have been at odds over crucial terms of the partnership, including where to build the sites, according to people familiar with the matter. While the companies pledged at the January announcement to invest $100 billion 'immediately," the project is now setting the more modest goal of building a small data center by the end of this year, likely in Ohio, the people said. Stargate's lethargic launch is a setback to the vast ambitions of Son, who despite spending billions of dollars over the years, has been playing catch-up in the fast-evolving AI sector. SoftBank committed $30 billion to OpenAI earlier this year. It is by far the largest-ever startup investment—an enormous wager that has led SoftBank to take on new debt and sell assets. The investment was made alongside the plans for Stargate, giving SoftBank a role in the physical infrastructure needed for AI. Altman, eager to secure the computing power to support the next generations of his company's signature product, ChatGPT, has plowed ahead without SoftBank, signing deals for data centers with other operators. The leaders of both companies say all is well in their joint effort. Last week they appeared on video at a SoftBank event, and Altman said they have an initial goal of building 10 gigawatts of data centers together. It is a 'wonderful partnership," he said. In a joint statement, the two companies said they were advancing projects in multiple states and were 'moving at hyperscale and speed to deliver the AI infrastructure that will power the future and serve humanity." Stargate's rocky start hasn't slowed the data-center development spree thatt Trump has said is a national priority. AI enthusiasts say the world will require a gargantuan effort to build the warehouse-like structures filled with computer servers—and the electricity needed to supply them—on par with the construction of railroads in the 19th century. Altman's OpenAI recently struck a data-center deal with Oracle that calls for OpenAI to pay more than $30 billion a year to the software and cloud-computing company starting within three years, according to people familiar with the transaction. That deal, which doesn't involve SoftBank, totals 4.5 gigawatts of capacity, and would consume the equivalent power of more than two Hoover Dams, enough to power about four million homes. The data centers are spread among locations around the U.S., people familiar with the deal said. Taken with a smaller deal OpenAI struck with CoreWeave, OpenAI has now completed data center deals for nearly as much capacity as Stargate promised for this year in January. (OpenAI has said $100 billion roughly equates to 5 gigawatts of data centers.) Despite Stargate's slow start, Son has told associates he is bullish on OpenAI and would like to invest even more in the company, a person familiar with the matter said. Son has long craved a prominent seat at the AI table. Over the past decade, he devoted the two largest startup funds ever raised—more than $140 billion—to finding the AI companies of the future, only to miss out on OpenAI and all of its competitors before the launch of ChatGPT, while being tarred by high-profile flops such as WeWork and construction startup Katerra. He had better success with his 2016 acquisition of chip company Arm, which surged in value during the past two years. In the fall, he zeroed in on OpenAI. Altman had ambitions on a scale without precedent: He has said trillions of dollars will be needed to fund the next stages of AI. In November, Son and Altman met in Tokyo to hash out an agreement. They next brought their plans to Trump aides with the offer of announcing a giant U.S. investment. On the second day of Trump's new administration, they stood smiling in the White House beside Trump, vowing to spend $500 billion by 2029. 'This is the beginning of our golden age," Son said at the White House. OpenAI and SoftBank each pledged $18 billion to the venture to get started, which they expected would develop data centers and then lease them to OpenAI. The two companies said they would jointly control the entity, with Son as its chairman. with SoftBank focusing on the financial details and OpenAI on the operations. They named Oracle and U.A.E. firm MGX as partners in the initial announcement, but their role was unclear. No agreement setting out their investment levels had been at the time reached. 'Stargate is not formed yet," Oracle CEO Safra Katz said on an investor call last month. One recent complication between OpenAI and SoftBank has been over how extensively to build data centers on sites tied to SB Energy, a SoftBank-backed energy developer, according to people familiar with the matter. Altman has used the Stargate name, shared with a 1994 Kurt Russell film about aliens who teleport to ancient Egypt, on projects that aren't being financed by the partnership between OpenAI and SoftBank. The trademark to Stargate is held by SoftBank, according to public filings. For instance, OpenAI refers to a data center in Abilene, Texas, and another it agreed in March to use in Denton, Texas, as part of Stargate even though they are being done without SoftBank, some of the people familiar with the matter said. Building data centers isn't easy. Companies need to find sites, develop the physical structures—or pay another company to do that—buy expensive AI chips, source vast loads of electricity and find lenders to cover much of the cost, among other details. Stargate is hoping to use a new, lower-cost design for its first project in Ohio, people familiar with the matter said. Training new, better AI models requires evermore data processing, which means companies including OpenAI are committing to larger and larger spending well before the business models of AI companies have proved profitable. OpenAI's $30-billion-a-year deal with Oracle is roughly three times as much as what Altman's company has recently projected in annual revenue. The company, which is losing billions of dollars a year, is betting its revenue will multiply thanks to the growing ranks of paying customers and advertising, allowing it to pay for its hefty commitments. Write to Eliot Brown at and Berber Jin at

Economic Times
42 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Asian shares advance, Japan gains after elections
Asian shares rose at the open after US stocks soared to a record ahead of a busy earnings week that will include results from Tesla Inc. and Alphabet Inc. ADVERTISEMENT Shares in Tokyo — where Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said he would carry on as leader even as the ruling coalition lost its majority in the upper house election — gained 1% as trading resumed after a public holiday Monday. The MSCI regional stock gauge advanced 0.3% after the S&P 500 index closed above 6,300 for the first time. A cohort of the world's largest asset managers is leaning harder into the rally in risk assets as US stocks push to fresh highs, defying persistent trade and geopolitical tensions. The high-octane wager is that while President Donald Trump is threatening to disrupt the economic order anew, he will step back from the brink. Traders are now looking for signs of resilience in corporate earnings amid tariff risks.'Earnings season will move into full swing this week, and the guidance will be more important than usual,' said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak. 'This guidance is going to have create a very large increase in earnings estimates if the market is going to reach some of the targets that exist on Wall Street right now.'Investors also kept a close eye on tariff headlines. Trump may issue more unilateral tariff letters before Aug. 1, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said. More trade deals may also be reached before the deadline, she added. ADVERTISEMENT Meanwhile, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. will be the latest foreign leader eager to make a deal before the US-imposed Aug. 1 tariff deadline when he visits Trump in the Oval Office later Tuesday. Market participants are focused on the performance of Japanese markets as investors weigh policy uncertainty after the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's historic loss in Sunday's elections. ADVERTISEMENT The yen depreciated slightly against the dollar after strengthening as much as 1% Monday following Ishiba's the election out of the way, 'the possibility of a 'sell Japan' trend, due to worries over extreme fiscal spending, has lessened,' supporting stock prices, said Hideyuki Ishiguro, chief strategist at Nomura Asset Management. However, uncertainty around the new political landscape is likely to cap gains, he said. ADVERTISEMENT In the US, the second-quarter earnings season is off to a ripping start, with consumer strength powering resilient corporate profits. Yet after hitting a series of all-time highs, the S&P 500 is trading around 22 times expected 12-month profits.'While stocks may be due for a breather, we believe the bull market remains intact,' said Ulrike Hoffmann-Burchardi at UBS Global Wealth Management. 'We maintain our June 2026 S&P 500 price target of 6,500, and recommend using volatility as an opportunity to phase into markets.' ADVERTISEMENT The S&P 500 hasn't posted a 1% up or down day since late June, and Mark Hackett at Nationwide notes that volatility gauges also remain 'suspiciously quiet.' 'This calm is unusual and may reflect both investor fatigue and institutional hesitation to fight the current trend,' he said. 'We're in a window where calm can quickly turn to complacency. While a break in either direction is possible, current positioning suggests we'd bet on a rally before a drop.' (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Asian shares advance, Japan gains after elections
Asian shares rose at the open after US stocks soared to a record ahead of a busy earnings week that will include results from Tesla Inc. and Alphabet Inc. Shares in Tokyo — where Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said he would carry on as leader even as the ruling coalition lost its majority in the upper house election — gained 1% as trading resumed after a public holiday Monday. The MSCI regional stock gauge advanced 0.3% after the S&P 500 index closed above 6,300 for the first time. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Select a Course Category Management Product Management Project Management Technology Degree Cybersecurity Digital Marketing PGDM Artificial Intelligence Data Science MBA CXO Operations Management others Data Analytics Others Leadership Data Science Healthcare healthcare Design Thinking MCA Public Policy Finance Skills you'll gain: Duration: 10 Months IIM Kozhikode CERT-IIMK GMPBE India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 11 Months IIM Kozhikode CERT-IIMK General Management Programme India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 9 Months IIM Calcutta CERT-IIMC APSPM India Starts on undefined Get Details A cohort of the world's largest asset managers is leaning harder into the rally in risk assets as US stocks push to fresh highs, defying persistent trade and geopolitical tensions. The high-octane wager is that while President Donald Trump is threatening to disrupt the economic order anew, he will step back from the brink. Traders are now looking for signs of resilience in corporate earnings amid tariff risks. 'Earnings season will move into full swing this week, and the guidance will be more important than usual,' said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak. 'This guidance is going to have create a very large increase in earnings estimates if the market is going to reach some of the targets that exist on Wall Street right now.' Live Events Investors also kept a close eye on tariff headlines. Trump may issue more unilateral tariff letters before Aug. 1, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said. More trade deals may also be reached before the deadline, she added. Meanwhile, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. will be the latest foreign leader eager to make a deal before the US-imposed Aug. 1 tariff deadline when he visits Trump in the Oval Office later Tuesday. Market participants are focused on the performance of Japanese markets as investors weigh policy uncertainty after the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's historic loss in Sunday's elections. The yen depreciated slightly against the dollar after strengthening as much as 1% Monday following Ishiba's loss. With the election out of the way, 'the possibility of a 'sell Japan' trend, due to worries over extreme fiscal spending, has lessened,' supporting stock prices, said Hideyuki Ishiguro, chief strategist at Nomura Asset Management. However, uncertainty around the new political landscape is likely to cap gains, he said. In the US, the second-quarter earnings season is off to a ripping start, with consumer strength powering resilient corporate profits. Yet after hitting a series of all-time highs, the S&P 500 is trading around 22 times expected 12-month profits. 'While stocks may be due for a breather, we believe the bull market remains intact,' said Ulrike Hoffmann-Burchardi at UBS Global Wealth Management. 'We maintain our June 2026 S&P 500 price target of 6,500, and recommend using volatility as an opportunity to phase into markets.' The S&P 500 hasn't posted a 1% up or down day since late June, and Mark Hackett at Nationwide notes that volatility gauges also remain 'suspiciously quiet.' 'This calm is unusual and may reflect both investor fatigue and institutional hesitation to fight the current trend,' he said. 'We're in a window where calm can quickly turn to complacency. While a break in either direction is possible, current positioning suggests we'd bet on a rally before a drop.'