Japan

Intelligence for Better Decision Making

Tokyo stocks reach historic highs as semiconductor rally drives market surge
Jan. 15, 2026 | Financial System

Tokyo’s stock market reached new record highs, propelled by a rally in semiconductor stocks.

**On January 14, Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 opened at 54,050.38 yen—its first entry into the 54,000 range—and climbed 501.22 yen from the previous close.**
For the second day in a row, the index set fresh peaks, closing the morning session at 54,413.92 yen (up 864.76 yen) and reopening in the afternoon at 54,461.07 yen near all-time highs.

**Semiconductor-related shares led the advance, supported by a three-day surge in the US Philadelphia Semiconductor Index.**
Advantest added roughly 330 yen to the Nikkei as the largest single-stock contributor, while Tokyo Electron, FANUC and Yaskawa Electric posted strong gains as investors poured into technology, machinery and precision instruments.

**Investors drew optimism from several supportive factors.**
The yen traded in the low 159-per-dollar range, bolstering exporters’ competitiveness. Geopolitical tensions drove gold above 26,000 yen per gram. Expectations for aggressive fiscal measures under Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi—and a possible snap lower-house election to solidify her mandate for expanded spending—spurred buying in infrastructure-related sectors.

**Trading volume in Tokyo reached 1.19 billion shares with a total value of 3.4782 trillion yen.**
Market breadth skewed positive, with 175 Nikkei components advancing, 47 declining and three unchanged. Mining, precision instruments, machinery and glass and stone products led sector gains, while information and communications, fisheries/agriculture/forestry and land transportation lagged.

**Other Tokyo benchmarks also rose.**
The TOPIX gained 31.40 points to close at 3,630.29, and the Standard TOP20 extended its rally on heavy volume of 318.87 million shares. In contrast, the Growth 250 and Growth Core indices slipped as investors took profits in smaller-cap and growth-oriented stocks.

**Large-cap performance diverged: Advantest, Fast Retailing and Tokyo Electron lifted the market, but a steep drop in SoftBank Group shaved about 158 yen off the Nikkei, and TDK, Daiichi Sankyo and Toyota also retreated.**
This shift reflected sector rotation as investors reallocated toward policy-sensitive and export-benefit plays amid evolving domestic and global economic and political dynamics.
Yen Slides Toward 159 Amid Fiscal Uncertainty and Snap Election Signals
Jan. 15, 2026 | Macroeconomics & Growth

The yen’s fluctuating exchange rate against the dollar reflects growing concerns over Japan’s fiscal policy and market volatility.

**On January 12, Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama met US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in Washington to express shared concern over the yen’s recent steep depreciation.**
Katayama stressed Japan’s serious worry as the currency weakened to a one-year low, and Bessent agreed on the need for coordinated foreign-exchange policy and continued dialogue.

**The yen’s decline accelerated after reports that Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi would dissolve the House of Representatives and call a snap general election for February 8.**
Traders anticipated her administration would pursue more aggressive expansionary fiscal measures, stoking worries about Japan’s fiscal health and prompting widespread yen selling.

**In New York’s FX market on January 13, the yen traded around ¥158.74–158.84 per dollar before weakening to roughly ¥159.11–159.21 in subsequent sessions.**
The euro hovered near ¥185.2–¥185.3, while the benchmark 10-year Japanese government bond yield briefly climbed to 2.150%, its highest level since February 1999. Japanese equities rallied alongside the falling yen: the Nikkei index surged more than 3% intraday to close at 53,623.09, and the Topix gained 2.44% to finish at 3,599.73.

**Traders briefly bought yen after the US December Consumer Price Index showed a 2.7% year-on-year increase, but dollar strength returned as political and fiscal uncertainty in Japan dominated sentiment.**
The dollar index rose to 99.15, while the euro and pound weakened.

**Market participants warn that any move toward the key ¥160 level could spur Japanese foreign-exchange intervention.**
Steven Jen of Eurizon SLJ Capital notes the market skew favors further yen losses, suggesting intervention could trigger a sharp rebound. Kit Jacks of Société Générale views a breach past ¥160 as a short-selling opportunity, pointing out that Japanese authorities focus more on volatility and the pace of moves than on fixed exchange-rate thresholds.

**Analysts expect yen selling to persist alongside anticipated expansionary fiscal policy.**
While cash intervention offers a deterrent, they see limited scope for large-scale operations. Instead, verbal warnings may serve to delay further declines rather than fund major market intervention.

Monitored Intelligence for Japan - Jan. 16, 2026


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Crane hits train in Thailand, killing at least 32

NHK | English | News | Jan. 16, 2026 | Accidents

At least 32 people have died and more than 60 others injured after a construction crane fell onto a passenger train in Thailand. The accident took place on Wednesday morning in Nakhon Ratchasima province, in the northeast part of the country. The train, which was traveling from Bangkok, had around 200 passengers on board at the time.

Firefighters responded to a blaze caused by the train derailment. Authorities confirmed that all those killed or injured are Thai nationals. The crane was part of ongoing work on an elevated high-speed railway line, a joint project involving China. However, a spokesperson from Beijing's foreign ministry noted that the specific section where the incident occurred is reportedly being constructed by a Thai company.

An official investigation has been launched to determine the cause of the crane collapse.

貸出・マネタリー統計(25年12月)~銀行貸出の急拡大が続く一方、日銀の資金供給量は減少加速

Lending and Monetary Statistics (December 2025) – While Bank Lending Continues to Rapidly Expand, the Bank of Japan's Fund Supply Volume Accelerates Its Decline

NLI Research Institute | Local Language | AcademicThink | Jan. 16, 2026 | UndeterminedFinancial System Problems

Bank lending in December 2025 increased by 4.81% year-on-year, with a notable expansion among city banks. This growth appears driven by funding demand related to mergers and acquisitions, real estate transactions, and working capital needs resulting from rising costs.

Concurrently, the Bank of Japan’s monetary base has been contracting for seven consecutive months, with an accelerated pace of decline following the normalization of monetary policy. The overall volume of funds supplied by the Bank of Japan has decreased.

Money stock growth has slowed slightly, although there is a noticeable shift in the composition of funds. Depositors are moving money away from cash and ordinary deposits toward time deposits and certain risk assets.

【論考】令和8年度税制改正大綱で「103万円の壁」の引上げの効果はどうなるか

An Analysis of the Effects of Raising the 1.03 Million Yen Threshold in the 2026 Tax Reform Outline

Tokyo Foundation for Policy Research | Local Language | AcademicThink | Jan. 16, 2026 | Regulation

The 2026 tax reform outline, decided on December 26, 2025, raises the income tax basic deduction and employment income deduction, effectively increasing the minimum taxable threshold from 1.60 million yen to 1.78 million yen. This adjustment is aimed at extending tax relief benefits beyond low-income households to middle- and high-income earners. Specific increases include a 40,000 yen rise in both deductions, with additional increments for certain income brackets, particularly benefiting those with pre-tax salaries up to 6.65 million yen. No changes were made to the basic deduction for individual resident tax, but the expanded employment income deduction applies to it.

Micro-simulation analysis using data from the 2023 Japanese Household Panel Survey (JHPS2023) and the National Tax Agency’s Sample Survey of Declared Income Tax was conducted to assess the reform’s impact on households. The simulation shows that tax reductions vary by income; for example, a person earning 2 million yen annually sees a tax cut of about 9,000 yen, whereas someone earning 6 million yen receives a cut near 37,000 yen. Dual-earner households benefit more compared to single-earner households with similar total incomes due to the individual-level nature of income tax. Higher-income classes generally have more taxpayers per household, amplifying tax savings at the household level.

The total estimated revenue loss from the reform is approximately 747.1 billion yen, closely aligning with the government’s projection of 749.4 billion yen. Notably, over half (56%) of this revenue loss occurs within the highest income groups (Classes VIII to X), highlighting that while the reform is intended to aid low- and middle-income households, significant benefits also accrue to higher-income households. This outcome exposes a limitation of the individual-level income tax system where expanded deductions for middle-income earners translate into substantial relief for high-income households as well.

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