Japan's stock market showed slight improvements on Tuesday, following inconsistent signs from Wall Street. This rise comes after the previous two sessions of gains, with the Nikkei 225 floating above the 38,200 mark. Major factors influencing this surge include performance improvement from significant index contributors and exporters.
The primary Nikkei 225 Index witnessed an increase of 30.73 points or 0.08 percent, reaching 38,210.19, after peaking at 38,477.68 earlier in the day. However, Japanese shares closed Monday on a slightly lower note.
Index heavyweight SoftBank Group saw an increase of nearly 2 percent, while Fast Retailing, the operator of Uniqlo experienced a mild setback with a loss of about 1 percent. Auto manufacturers had mixed results with Honda down by more than 1 percent, and Toyota experiencing 0.5 percent growth.
Tech sector performance showed Advantest with a rise of around 3 percent. However, Tokyo Electron and Screen Holdings both faced shrinkages of 0.5 and 2 percent respectively. In the banking sector, Sumitomo Mitsui Financial and Mizuho Financial were both slightly down while Mitsubishi UFJ Financial showed a minor increase.
Major exporters such as Panasonic and Canon made gains of over 2 percent and 0.3 percent respectively. Mitsubishi Electric and Sony both increased by nearly 1 percent each. Furukawa Electric, Obayashi, Toppan Holdings, Mercari, Suzuki Motor, Yamaha Motor, UBE, and Dai Nippon Printing all saw a significant increase, while Nintendo, Konami Group, NEXON, M3, LY Corp., and Shiseido also had meaningful growth.
Not all companies shared this upward trend. Mitsubishi and Tosoh's shares dropped by over 7 percent. Daiwa Securities, Nissan Chemical, Chugai Pharmaceutical, Fujikura, and several others recorded notable declines.
In terms of economic news, Japan's producer prices saw a 0.3 percent monthly increase in April. Annually, the increase was 0.9 percent, according to the Bank of Japan. Export prices were up, whereas import prices fell.
In currency markets, the U.S. dollar traded in the lower 156 yen-range on Tuesday. Wall Street stocks showed a mediocre performance on Monday, with major averages bouncing back and forth around the unchanged line. European markets reported a slight drop.
Crude oil prices increased on Monday due to anticipation surrounding demand after OPEC's decision to prolong supply cuts into the second half of the year, causing West Texas Intermediate Crude oil futures for June to end at $79.12 a barrel.