ere because the Nikkei is price-weighted, so a handful of high-share-price companies can move the headline number more than their size in the economy might suggest.
Meanwhile, geopolitics pulled attention back to inflation risk. After US officials signaled renewed military action involving Iran and threats around the Strait of Hormuz, oil climbed about 1%. Higher energy costs can push up expected inflation, which helps explain why Japan’s 10-year government bond yield hit a fresh 30-year high and why rate-sensitive groups like real estate and fuel-exposed areas like air transport lagged even as the Nikkei finished up.
Why should I care?
For markets: The Nikkei’s 67,743 close can say more about Advantest and Tokyo Electron than about Japan’s average stock.
When the Nikkei rises even though most stocks are down, it’s a reminder that index levels don’t always reflect broad market health. Because the Nikkei is price-weighted, a rally in a few expensive shares can overpower weakness elsewhere, making the headline move look stronger than the “typical” Japanese stock. That’s why days like this can create a disconnect between Nikkei-linked signals (and products like futures and options tied to it) and what diversified Japan exposure is experiencing. In contrast, TOPIX – which represents a wider swath of companies – often gives a cleaner read on overall Japanese equity risk when one sector, like semiconductors, is doing all the work.
