Japan stocks retreat as BOJ outlook and tech losses weigh

April 28, 2026 · 4:04 pm IST Source: Business Standard
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Key Takeaways

  • Japans Nikkei 225 fell 0.6% on Tuesday, pulling back from recent highs as investors reacted to the Bank of Japans latest policy decision.
  • The central bank kept its interest rate unchanged at 0.75%, as expected, but raised its inflation forecast while cutting its FY2026 growth outlook, citing risks from the Middle East conflict.
  • Advantest dropped sharply despite reporting strong earnings, while SoftBank Group fell nearly 10% amid fresh worries about the AI sector.

Full Report

Japans Nikkei 225 fell 0.6% on Tuesday, pulling back from recent highs as investors reacted to the Bank of Japans latest policy decision. The central bank kept its interest rate unchanged at 0.75%, as expected, but raised its inflation forecast while cutting its FY2026 growth outlook, citing risks from the Middle East conflict. Notably, some policymakers signaled a preference for future rate hikes, reflecting rising concern about inflation.

Geopolitical tensions also remained in focus, with uncertainty lingering despite a new proposal from Iran to the US, as disagreements over its nuclear program continue.

Technology stocks led the market decline. Advantest dropped sharply despite reporting strong earnings, while SoftBank Group fell nearly 10% amid fresh worries about the AI sector. Other major stocks, including Hitachi, Tokyo Electron, and Fanuc, also posted notable losses, adding to the broader market weakness.

Originally reported by Business Standard.
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IPO Cracker Take

Monetary policy shifts ripple into IPO valuations through discount rates and liquidity. Use our IPO evaluation framework to factor rate changes into any upcoming issue.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Higher rates increase the discount rate used in DCF valuations, typically compressing IPO valuations. Banking and NBFC IPOs benefit from rate cycles in different ways than tech or consumer.

Broader rate outlook matters, but each IPO should still be evaluated on its own financials. Our IPO evaluation framework walks through the key metrics.

Banking, NBFC, housing finance, and real estate are the most rate-sensitive. Consumer staples and utilities are relatively insulated.
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