Japan's Nikkei rises ahead of BOJ decision; Advantest jumps

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Nikkei inched up as investors awaited Bank of Japan's rate decision. Focus is on U.S. trade talks. Advantest surged, buoyed by U.S. tech gains. Bank of Japan is expected to hold rates steady. Investors are keen on Governor Ueda's comments on U.S. trade policy impact. Economy Minister Akazawa is set for trade talks. Murata Manufacturing declined after disappointing results.

Japan's Nikkei share average edged higher on Thursday as investors awaited the Bank of Japan's latest interest rate decision, and developments in the U.S. trade talks with Tokyo's top negotiator in Washington.

The Nikkei rose 0.4% to 36,177.63, as of 0150 GMT, with the BOJ's policy announcement due some time in the late Tokyo morning or early afternoon.



The broader Topix was flat. The tech-heavy Nikkei was buoyed by a 6.3% jump for chip-testing equipment maker Advantest, as it tracked after-hours advances for U.

S. tech megacaps Meta Platforms and Microsoft on strong financial results. Japan's central bank is widely expected to leave rates steady, while cutting growth forecasts.

Investors will be more focused on what BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda has to say on the impact of U.S. trade policy in the board's thinking about when to next raise interest rates.

Market-implied odds for a quarter-point hike by year-end are currently little better than a coin toss, according to LSEG calculations. Later in the day, Japanese economy minister Ryosei Akazawa is likely to hold his second round of talks on a tariff deal. U.

S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that deals with Japan, South Korea and India may be close. Any progress in these negotiations, and although it will be little by little, we should see calm return to Japanese equities, and the Nikkei could recover to the 37,000 level, said Wataru Akiyama, a strategist at Nomura Securities.

Trade uncertainty continued to weigh on shipping shares, with the sector dropping 2.8% to be the worst performer among the Tokyo Stock Exchange's 33 industry groups. The Nikkei's biggest decliner was Murata Manufacturing , which tumbled nearly 15% after reporting financial results that disappointed investors.

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