Japan stocks surge on weaker yen, US election
Japanese stocks surged on Wednesday, propelled by a weaker yen, global equity gains.
The benchmark Nikkei 225 stock average climbed 406.64 points, or 4.46 per cent, to 9,521.24. The broader Topix added 6.17 per cent to 966.91.
A strong overnight rally on Wall Street lifted Japanese stocks in the morning, but gains accelerated in the afternoon as Obama sealed his historic victory in the US presidential race.
Investors were upbeat after Obama's win, as well as the Democrats' bigger majorities in Congress, said Toshikazu Horiuchi, equity strategist at Cosmo Securities in Tokyo.
``There are expectations now for prompt economic stimulus measures,'' he said.
But there were also some concerns that a Democratic president and Congress might take a harder line on trade.
A strong yen hurts exporters by making Japanese products more expensive in overseas markets and reducing the the value of profits when repatriated to Japan.
Sanyo Electric Co surged 18 per cent after being untraded Tuesday due to a rush of buy orders triggered by weekend reports that the company may be bought by rival Panasonic Corp.
A Sanyo-Panasonic entity would create Japan's biggest electronics maker, surpassing Hitachi Ltd., and would also be among the biggest in the world. Officials from both companies denied Tuesday that any deal has been reached.
In currencies, the dollar was trading at 99.43 yen Wednesday afternoon, up from the 98-yen zone the previous day in Asia.
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