Money - International
Tokyo shares open higher after Wall Street rally
Pedestrians walk past an electric quotation board displaying the numbers on the Nikkei 225 Index on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo December 2, 2019. u00e2u20acu201d AFP pic

TOKYO, March 31 ― Tokyo stocks opened higher today, with investor sentiment propped up by a rally on Wall Street despite ongoing worries about the further spread of coronavirus infections.

The benchmark Nikkei 225 index gained 0.31 per cent or 59.98 points to 19,144.95 in early trade while the broader Topix index slipped 0.15 per cent or 2.19 points to 1,433.35.

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Wall Street stocks gained more than three per cent yesterday as markets weighed a dire near-term economic outlook against unprecedented federal spending and central bank interventions.

"Japanese stocks are likely to test a rebound following upturns in US shares,” Okasan Online Securities chief strategist Yoshihiro Ito said.

"But we should not loosen our caution given lingering worries about a further spread of the coronavirus in Japan,” he said in a note.

Concerns over a possible declaration of a state of emergency in Japan by the prime minister were also limiting rises, he added.

The dollar rose to ¥108.10 (RM4.30) from  ¥107.72 in New York yesterday afternoon.

Major karaoke company Daiichikosho lost 2.03 per cent to ¥2,930 as Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike urged residents to stay away from karaoke parlours, bars and nightclubs to prevent the virus from spreading.

Fujifilm continued to rise on expectations that its anti-flu medicine Avigan will be approved as a treatment for the coronavirus, gaining 2.70 per cent to ¥5,464.

Automakers were broadly lower with Nissan down 2.7 per cent at ¥374.5 and Toyota off 0.57 per cent at ¥6,758.

Shortly before the market opened, government figures showed the unemployment rate remained stable in February at 2.4 per cent, in line with economist expectations.

The ratio between the number of jobs and the number of jobseekers remains high, but dropped slightly from January, with 145 jobs available for every 100 jobseekers compared to 149 jobs per 100 jobseekers a month earlier. ― AFP

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