TOKYO, March 9 (Reuters) - Tokyo stocks could plumb new
20-year lows this week as war worries and a host of domestic
factors discourage buyers.
Analysts said the Nikkei average <.N225> could drop below
8,000, a key support level, after falling 2.62 percent last week
to 8,144.12 -- its lowest close since March 1983.
"Investor appetite has dried up, so I won't be surprised if
the Nikkei falls below the 8,000 mark," said Reiko Nakayama, head
of the investment strategy division at Marusan Securities.
Some investors may look for bargains early in the week, but
the market's longer-term prospects are clouded by the prospect of
a trade-disrupting war on Iraq, worries about North Korea's
missile and nuclear programmes, and a weak economic outlook.
News that major market player Nikko Salomon Smith Barney --
owned by Citigroupand Nikko Cordial Corp <8603.T> -- had
been cited for stock manipulation will add to the gloom.
Shares of Nikko Cordial, Japan's third biggest broking house,
dropped 12 percent when the news broke on Friday.
Analysts said the Nikkei is likely to move between 7,800 and
8,350 this week.
The further prices fall, the more Japanese banks and private
pension funds are expected to dump shares in the run-up to the
end of the fiscal year on March 31.
Also, global fund managers, who have been buying Japanese
shares since the start of this year, are now locking in profits,
triggering falls in issues such as Nippon Steel Corp <5401.T>.
"People pay little attention to economic fundamentals now.
The focus has narrowed to whether the Iraq issue will send the
market to a new low or not," said Yutaka Miura, deputy manager of
Shinko Securities' equity information section. "The mood here
will likely follow the ups and downs on Wall Street."
THIS TIME MAY BE DIFFERENT
In 1991, the Nikkei surged 17 percent in a six-week "relief
rally" that began with the onset of the U.S.-led campaign in
Iraq. The U.S. Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose 18 percent.
But traders said stocks may fall this time if Washington
presses ahead with a war without the support of key allies.
On Friday, the Dow Jones industrials average <.DJI> closed up
0.86 percent at 7,740.03 on the hope that a March 17 deadline for
Iraq to meet disarmament demands could help resolve the crisis.
With only three weeks to go before year-end book-closings for
most Japanese companies, the drop in share prices is bad news for
banks, which are saddled with mountains of bad loans, as lower
valuations on their stock holdings will erode their capital.
Analysts say many banks' capital adequacy ratios -- a key
gauge of financial health -- could fall below the eight percent
global requirement if the Nikkei approaches 7,500.
At Friday's close, combined unrealised stock losses at the
top seven banking groups stood at around 5.84 trillion yen ($50
billion), according to Daiwa Institute of Research.
Investors are also concerned about the ability of Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi to deal with any financial crisis.
Friday's arrest of Takanori Sakai, a member of the ruling
Liberal Democratic Party, was the latest of a series of political
scandals to embarrass reformist Koizumi, whose popularity is
fading ahead of nationwide local elections in April.
Sakai is alleged to have breached political funding laws.
"I don't think we should immediately change our basic views
that the Nikkei will stay between 8,200 and 9,200, the range it
has been caught (in) for five months or so," said Yorinobu Hara,
general manager at Resona Asset Management.
"A fall to 8,000 would be a negligible error. But a political
vacuum is a worry because that means Japan has neither economic
nor foreign policy (to deal with a possible crisis)."
- Forums
- General
- nikkei 20 year lows and sub 8000 imminent
nikkei 20 year lows and sub 8000 imminent
-
- There are more pages in this discussion • 8 more messages in this thread...
You’re viewing a single post only. To view the entire thread just sign in or Join Now (FREE)