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The Nikkei Average continued to sharply decline, with the decline in financial stocks due to the strengthening of the yen and the decrease in interest rates.
On the 16th, the U.S. stock market was mixed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 41,622.08, up 228.30 points (+0.55%), the Nasdaq closed at 17,592.13, down 91.85 points (-0.52%), and the S&P 500 closed at 5,633.09, up 7.07 points (+0.13%). Ahead of the upcoming Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting this week, there was a cautious stance and the market was mixed after the opening. The September New York Fed Manufacturing Business Index recovered to expansion territory for the first time in about a year, indicating a positive manufacturing sector.
Nikkei Average Contribution Ranking (Before Closing) - Nikkei Average plunged significantly, with Toshiba Electronic pushing down by about 144 yen in one stock.
As of the close on the 17th, the number of rising stocks in the Nikkei Average constituent stocks was 43, the number of declining stocks was 182, and the number of unchanged stocks was 0. The Nikkei Average continued to decline. Compared to the previous trading day, it finished the morning session at 35,828.54 yen (volume estimated at 900,100,000 shares) with a decrease of 753.22 yen (-2.06%). The US stock market on the 16th was mixed. The Dow Average closed at 41,622.08 yen, up 228.30 yen (+0.55%), and the Nasdaq was down 91.85 points (-0.52%) at 17.
The Nikkei average continued to fall significantly, breaking below 36,000 yen as the yen strengthened.
The Nikkei Average fell sharply. It ended the morning session at 35,828.54 yen (down 753.22 yen or -2.06%) compared to the previous trading day, with an estimated trading volume of 0.9 billion 10 million shares. The US stock market on the 16th was mixed. The Dow Jones Average closed at 41,622.08 dollars, up 228.30 dollars or +0.55%. The Nasdaq fell 91.85 points or -0.52% to 17,592.13, and the S&P 500 closed at 5,633.09, up 7.07 points or +0.13%. This week's
Three points to watch in the afternoon session - the development of the yen's high level, which is disliked since 8 months ago
In the afternoon trading on the 11th, the following three points should be noted. - The Nikkei Average continued to decline for 7 days, and there was a development that was fed up with the high yen level for the first time in 8 months. - The dollar-yen exchange rate was weak, trading at around 141 yen. - The top contributors to the price decline were Fast Retailing (9983) and KDDI Corporation (9433). The Nikkei Average continued to decline for 7 days, reaching 35,867.33 yen (a decrease of 291.83 yen or -0.81%) with a volume of approximately 840 million shares in the morning session.
The Nikkei Average has fallen for 7 consecutive days, with the Japanese yen at its highest level in 8 months being disliked.
The Nikkei average fell for the 7th consecutive day. It closed the morning session at 35,867.33 yen (volume approximately 0.84 billion shares), down 291.83 yen (-0.81%) from the previous day. The U.S. market on the 10th was mixed. The Dow closed at 40,736.96 dollars, down 92.63 points (-0.23%), while the Nasdaq closed at 17,025.88, up 141.28 points (+0.84%), and the S&P 500 closed at 5,495.52, up 24.47 points (+0.45%). Soft landing.
September 5th [Today's Investment Strategy]
[FISCO selected stock] [Raw material stock] Skylark Holdings <3197> 2244.5 yen (9/4) operates "Gusto", "Bamiyan", "Mori-an", etc. Monthly sales report released. Same-store sales revenue in August increased by 13.4% compared to the same month last year. The growth rate expanded from the 4.6% increase in July. Typhoons made landfall multiple times, and there was an impact of about 2% due to business closures or shortened hours at some stores. However, consumer trends are generally strong. Sales promotion is being strengthened at Gusto and Jonathan, and after the Bon Festival
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