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Japan's Nikkei climbs on AI rally, as hopes of pension asset shifting lift yen and bonds

The Nikkei index rose on Friday, helped by a rally of AI-related stocks. Japan's currency and bond markets also grew on the back of a possible reorientation in the investment strategy?of its vast pension funds.

The Nikkei closed at 68 557.73 after rising up to 2.4% in the previous session. The Topix index rose 0.39%, to 4,036.08.

The yield on Japan’s 10-year government bonds fell by 11.5 basis points to 2.76%. This is a decline from the previous high of three decades. The yen gained?0.5% versus the greenback, reaching 161.550.

Wall Street tech shares soared when Micron Technology announced plans to invest $250 billion in the United States by 2035.

Shuutarou Yasuda is a market analyst with Tokai Tokyo Intelligence Laboratory.

Kazuaki Shimada is the chief strategist of IwaiCosmo Securities. He said that the index had trimmed its early gains because?South Korea’s benchmark KOSPI was losing strength.

Sumco, a chip-related company, surged 15.40% and reached a limit daily high of 5,244yen.

SoftBank Group, an investment conglomerate in the tech sector, rose 10.65%, while chip-testing equipment manufacturer Advantest climbed 2.3%.

Satsuki Catayama, Finance Minister, said on Thursday that the Government would look at ways to encourage pension funds (including the Government Pension Investment Fund) to increase their investments in domestic financial assets.

Bonds and the yen both benefited from the prospect that Japan's largest pension fund investors would direct more funds to local markets. Both have been under pressure for years.

Masahito Sugawa, senior strategist at Daiwa Securities, said that Katayama's comments helped reverse the selling trend of Japanese government bonds and the yen. "Now, half of the assets held by?Japanese Pension Funds are in foreign assets. The market bet that a possible shift in asset allocation to Japanese assets would be positive.

Miki Den is a senior Japan rate analyst at SMBC Nikko Securities. She said that the yields continued to decline as foreign investors purchased JGBs in order to cover their short positions following the opening of the European'market.

Fast Retailing shares closed down 3.59%, their biggest one-day decline since May 12.

(source: Reuters)