Asian stocks rose on tech strength, with the Nikkei hitting a new high near 58,000 after Takaichi’s win.

Asian equities climbed further on Tuesday, led by tech stocks, with Japan’s market hitting new records as investors embraced the “Takaichi trade” after PM Sanae Takaichi’s election win. Sentiment was supported by modest gains on Wall Street overnight, where the Nasdaq outperformed on a rebound in tech and AI shares, while U.S. futures were mostly flat in Asian trading.

Nikkei jumps to a fresh record, closing in on 58,000 after Takaichi’s victory.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 surged as much as 3% to a fresh record of 57,960, while the broader TOPIX advanced about 2.2% to an all-time high of 3,863.90. The gains followed a strong session on Monday, when the Nikkei rose nearly 4% and the TOPIX added 2.3%.

The rally underscored growing investor confidence in Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s policy agenda, widely seen as supportive of economic growth, corporate earnings, and domestic investment. Her decisive election victory over the weekend has reinforced expectations of continued pro-business reforms, expansionary fiscal policy, and initiatives to boost capital spending, innovation, and strategic sectors.

ING analysts said the landslide win strengthens the case for “responsible but expansionary” fiscal spending and a more Japan-centric foreign policy, adding that risk-on sentiment is likely to dominate markets in the near term.

Asian tech stocks extend gains

Technology shares across Asia extended recent gains after last week’s sharp global sell-off driven by AI and valuation concerns. South Korea’s KOSPI rose 0.5% after a more than 4% surge previously, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng added 0.5%, led by a 1% gain in the tech subindex. Mainland Chinese benchmarks were flat, Australia’s ASX 200 edged up 0.2%, Singapore’s STI slipped 0.3%, and India’s Nifty 50 futures were little changed. Investors are also awaiting key U.S. jobs and inflation data later this week for signals on interest rates and global growth.

Sources: Ayushman Ojha

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