Japanese stocks edge lower from 3.5-month highs, hit by weakness in financials

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
TOKYO: Japanese shares edged lower on Tuesday from 3.5-month highs the previous day, with financial shares leading declines as investors
booked profits on signs of an apparent peak in U.S
bond yields. The Nikkei ended 0.2 per cent lower at 22,960.34
The Topix also fell 0.2 per cent, to 1,809.57, weighed down by financial shares. Trading volume was thin, with only 1.28 billion shares
changing hands, the fewest since early April. Helping Tokyo markets rise on Monday was the reduction of fears of a trade war between China
and the United States, which was a key factor behind Wall Street's solid gains overnight. With Japanese companies' full-year earnings
releases priced in by the market, investors are waiting for new catalysts, analysts said. "The Nikkei touched a psychologically important
level of 23,000 thanks partly to relief about earnings," said Takuya Takahashi, a strategist at Daiwa Securities. Takahashi said that
companies' annual forecasts are based on conservative dollar-yen levels around 105, so as long as the current exchange rate for the
greenback is stronger, there are hopes firms will eventually revise up their earnings estimates. "There isn't much concern about earnings
for now, but investors are not chasing the market higher before they are convinced that companies will do better than expected
They want to see how their first-quarter performances will be," he said. An index for Japanese insurance companies extended its fall this
week to 4.0 per cent, as U.S
bond yields have slipped from near seven-year highs
Higher U.S
yields were seen as boosting investment returns for Japanese insurers. Investors locked in gains in the sector, one of the best performers
since March as trade war worries had engulfed exporters and others vulnerable to tariff threats. TD Holdings shed 2.7 per cent and MSAD
Insurance declined 2.8 per cent. Banks shed 0.3 per cent, with MUFG falling 0.2 per cent. Defensive shares also succumbed to profit-taking,
with food companies and retailers falling 0.4 per cent and 0.6 per cent, respectively.