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Japan's Nikkei falls as earnings and election momentum fade

The Nikkei?average in Japan fell on Tuesday, as investors took a profit amid few new trading cues. Meanwhile, the post-election excitement was fading and the earnings season was coming to a close. The Nikkei closed at 56,566.49, down 0.4% on the day. It has fallen 1.9% in four sessions. The Topix, which is a broader measure of the market, fell 0.7% to 3,761.55. Ryotaro sawada is a senior analyst at Tokai Tokyo Intelligence Laboratory. "We are seeing some technical profiteering."

After touching 72 on Friday, the Nikkei's RSI (relative strength index) for 14 days is now at 64. A level of?above 70% indicates that gains have been stretched too far.

LSEG data show that the earnings season in the fourth largest economy of the world is winding down. A little more than half of Nikkei companies have beaten analysts' expectations.

The post-general-election rally from last week, following fiscal dove Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's landslide victory, also appeared to fade, Sawada said.

The Nikkei benchmark index is up almost 13% so far this year on the back of expectations that Takaichi will cut taxes and spend a lot. However, some analysts feel these gains are too rapid.

SoftBank Group shares fell 5.1% and weighed down the index by 187. Stocks of the 'technology and investment conglomerate,' have been fluctuating between gains and losses in recent sessions.

NEC, a provider of information technology services, lost 4.7%.

Taiyo Yuden, a manufacturer of smartphone components, saw its shares rise by?8.7% and become Nikkei’s top gainer. Sumitomo Pharma's shares soared 7.2% after rising as high as 10.7%. Murata MFG rose 6.9%.

The Nikkei Index had 100 advancers and 125 decliners. (Reporting and editing by Sherry Phillips, Harikrishnan Nair and Satoshi Sugiyama)

(source: Reuters)