TOKYO: Tokyo's benchmark index soared more than four percent Wednesday morning, extending a rally on world markets as sentiment was buoyed by upbeat US data and hopes that new central bank moves will boost China's slowing economy.
The Japanese market picked up a strong lead from Wall Street, where stocks rallied Tuesday after reports on the US manufacturing sector, construction spending, and auto sales showed the world's top economy still resilient even as the global economy sputters.
The Nikkei 225 index jumped 4.04 percent, or 649.30 points, to 16,734.81 by the break and the broader Topix index of all first-section shares surged 3.69 percent, or 48.03 points, to 1,348.86.
"The US economy isn't as bad as we had expected," Takahisa Odaka, an equity market strategist at Nomura Holdings in Tokyo, told Bloomberg News.
"It'll take time to heal the wound in Japanese shares, but the bottom is getting firmer.
"If US economic data gets stronger and investors become more confident the global economy isn't slowing, we could see some buying back of shares."
Japanese shares have been hammered since the start of the year, with Tokyo's two key indices down about 12 percent, as a rout on world equity markets hit one of the world's biggest stock markets.
On Wednesday, exporter shares got a big boost as the yen slid from levels seen earlier this week -- a plus for the profitability of Japanese firms doing business overseas.
The upbeat US figures helped draw investors out of the yen, which is seen as a safe bet in times of turmoil and is watched as a sign of investor confidence.
The dollar was nearly flat at 113.88 yen in early afternoon trade from 113.94 yen late Tuesday in New York but was still up from 112.72 yen in Tokyo.
Market sentiment has been given a lift after the People's Bank of China late Monday announced it was cutting its reserve requirement for banks
The move is aimed at encouraging lending and stimulating activity in the world's number-two economy, which is a key driver of global growth.
In Tokyo trading, Uniqlo operator Fast Retailing, a market heavyweight, soared 5.74 percent to 33,110 yen by the break, while mobile carrier SoftBank was up 1.49 percent to 5,705 yen.
Automaker Toyota surged 3.82 percent to 6,117 yen and Sony surged 5.55 percent to 2,499 yen.
Despite a dip in oil prices, energy explorer Inpex jumped 3.72 percent to 857.5 yen.
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