Nikkei tumbles as exporters hit, market on edge after last week’s tumu

TOKYO, May 27:  Japan’s Nikkei share average slumped 3.1 percent on Monday morning, as a rebound in the yen hammered exporters in a market still on edge after last week’s turbulent trade sent the benchmark reeling to its worst loss in two years.
The Nikkei dropped 455.11 points to 14,157.34 at the midday break, with support pegged at 13,981.52, an intraday low hit on Friday’s choppy session. It dropped as low as 14,027.42 earlier.
A combination of factors, including worries the U.S. Federal Reserve will rollback its stimulus this year and weak factory activity data from China, Japan’s second-biggest export market, triggered last week’s  selloff.
The Nikkei dropped 7.3 percent on Thursday, its largest single-day loss since the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
The sour mood continued to weigh on the market in early trade, with S&P 500’s decline for a third day on Friday and a rebound in the yen further undermining  sentiment.
‘Negative sentiment is still lingering from worries on the Fed’s exit strategy,’ said Norihiro Fujito, a senior investment strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley  Securities.
‘Macro hedge funds, who bought Topix and Nikkei futures, sold them last week and they are still selling  them.’
Exporters lost ground, with Toyota Motor Corp declining 3.4 percent while Sony Corp shed 4.5 percent.
Securities firms also fell in sympathy with the weak market, with Nomura Holdings dropping 2.7 percent and Daiwa Securities falling 2.8 percent
Analysts said that last week’s turbulence was partly exacerbated by high frequency trading by hedge funds such as commodity trading advisors and retail investors engaging in margin trade. As a result, investors are likely to remain wary about further volatility, they said.
The broader Topix dropped 2.5 percent to 1,163.91.
The Nikkei has gained 36 percent this year and is up 15 percent since April 4, when the Bank Of Japan announced a sweeping monetary expansion campaign to vanquish years of deflation and revive growth.
Market players said those who were buying stocks and selling the yen reversed their positions when the yield on the 10-year cash bonds rose as high as one percent on  Thursday.
‘Last week’s shock will probably last throughout this week,’ said Kenichi Hirano, a strategist at Tachibana Securities. ‘But the Japanese market’s fundamentals in the mid-to-long term have not changed, so there still is upside in the longer term.’
OUTLOOK BULLISH LONG-TERM
As the weaker yen has improved the outlook for many exporters given it makes their products more competitive in offshore markets, analysts expect an average operating profit rise of 30 percent, compared with the companies’ conservative forecasts of around a 20 percent increase in operating profits.
Many exporters have used assumptions of around 90-95 yen to the dollar, while the U.S. Currency last traded at 101.01 yen.
Heightened risk-aversion saw the dollar post its worst week against the yen in a year on Friday but it is still well above what most companies were expecting.
‘We stay structurally bullish Japanese risk assets and continue to forecast Topix to rise to 1,400 over the next six to nine months,’ Jesper Koll, head of Japanese equity research at JPMorgan, wrote in a report, adding that last week’s pullback was a healthy correction.
He said that foreigners have remained net buyers, while local institutional investors and retail investors have been consistent sellers over the past several weeks.
‘This has not changed since the start of the new fiscal year April 1. No doubt, the fact that locals are still not buying has made it easier for foreign ‘fast money’ to trigger profit taking.’
(agencies)