Tokyo stocks recovered early losses to close higher on Tuesday as investors bought on dips following recent declines. The benchmark Nikkei 225 index, which fell for the third straight session on Monday, rose 1.45 percent or 307.49 points to 21,457.29 while the broader Topix index was up 1.38 percent or 21.90 points at 1,611.46.
Tokyo shares opened lower amid fears of a fresh escalation in the US trade row with China. Wall Street was dealt a blow after Bloomberg reported that President Donald Trump's administration plans more tariffs on China if talks between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping next month are unsuccessful.
"But bargain-hunting easily emerged as shares fell excessively in recent days," said Toshikazu Horiuchi, a broker at IwaiCosmo Securities. "Recoveries in Chinese shares encouraged Japanese investors to buy back stocks," Horiuchi told AFP, adding that a weak yen also helped improve market sentiment.
The yen hardly moved after government data early Tuesday confirmed Japan's jobless rate remained low, edging down to 2.3 percent in September from 2.4 percent in the previous month. In individual stocks trade, Sony rose 1.03 percent to 5,862 yen before its release of April-September results. After the market closed, Sony said its first-half net profit nearly doubled. Nintendo jumped 1.67 percent to 35,250 yen as it was also set to announce first-half results later Tuesday. Toyota rose 0.91 percent to 6,485 yen with Nissan up 1.47 percent at 1,009 yen.