Tokyo stocks close lower as investors wait for US-China trade talks

FILES: A pedestrian walks past a stock indicator board for the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo on August 13, 2018.  / AFP / Kazuhiro Nogi/

TOKYO, Japan (AFP)–Tokyo stocks closed lower on Monday as investors retreated to the sidelines to wait for the outcome of US-China trade talks later this week.

The benchmark Nikkei 225 index fell 0.32 percent, or 71.38 points, to 22,199.00 while the broader Topix index was down 0.32 percent, or 5.38 points, at 1,692.15.

“The market is caught between hopes and worries,” said Mutsumi Kagawa, chief global strategist at Rakuten Securities.

“The hopes are about possible progress in US-China trade frictions but concern about the Turkish situation is still weighing on the market,” he told AFP.

Investors were sitting on the sidelines to see how the talks between Washington and Beijing will turn out, he said.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the world’s two biggest economies were taking steps to try to resolve a trade dispute ahead of a November summit between US President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

Investors also “can’t shake off worries that the plunge in the Turkish lira could spill over to other emerging markets,” Kagawa said.

Adding to investor caution is a speech later this week by US Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell at an annual international symposium of economists and central bankers.

“If his tone on interest rate hikes is soft… it would underpin the yen against the dollar”, a negative development for Japanese exporters, Kagawa said.

The dollar was trading at 110.59 yen against 110.57 yen in New York Friday afternoon.

In individual stocks trade, Toyota was down 0.63 percent to 6,760 yen while Nintendo climbed 3.47 percent to 36,670 yen.

Panasonic, which supplies batteries to Tesla, was down 0.62 percent at 1,360.5 yen, after the electric carmaker’s shares tumbled on Friday as a wide-ranging interview with chief executive Elon Musk sparked fresh fears about the company’s future.

 

© Agence France-Presse