Tokyo's Nikkei plunged more than 3.7 percent on Thursday, after a punishing session on Wall Street that saw major US indices wipe out all their 2018 gains. The benchmark Nikkei 225 index gave up 3.72 percent, or 822.45 points to 21,268.73, while the broader Topix index lost 3.10 percent, or 51.15 points, to 1,600.92.
It was the worst close for the Nikkei in nearly seven months. The index began the day under heavy selling pressure after the US plunges. "A sense of uncertainty for the global economic outlook stoked worries that the market rout (in New York) was going to affect Asia," Okasan Online Securities said in a note to clients.
Investors are facing the expectation of higher US interest rates, which would boost borrowing costs, anxiety over the fallout from the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, and an ongoing budget dispute between Italy and Brussels. A US data report Wednesday showed home sales fell to their slowest pace in nearly two years, while forecasts from big companies AT&T, UPS and Texas Instruments disappointed.
Investors have grown wary that the US-China trade war is starting to weigh on US corporate earnings. "This mess of bad factors has made it difficult for markets to seize a chance to turn up," Makoto Sengoku, market analyst at Tokai Tokyo Research Institute, told AFP.
Risk aversion spawned safe-haven buying of the yen, in a negative development for Japanese exporters. Among blue chip firms Toyota lost 2.68 percent to 6,402 yen, while Sony plunged 5.46 percent to 5,869 yen. Uniqlo-operator Fast Retailing fell 4.94 percent to 54,400 yen.
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