Japan's Nikkei slips on profit booking after BOJ decision
BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 10/31/24 01:31 AM EDT(Updates at 0441 GMT)
TOKYO, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Japan's Nikkei share average index slipped on Thursday, as investors locked in their profits after the Bank of Japan kept key rates unchanged.
The Nikkei fell 1% at 38,875.78 as of 0441 GMT, after tracking the overnight declines in U.S. equities to open 0.25% lower.
The broader Topix slipped 0.84% to 2,681.05.
The BOJ maintained ultra-low interest rates on Thursday and signalled the need to scrutinise global economic developments.
"Investors sold stocks to book profits after the big event was over," said Takamasa Ikeda, senior portfolio manager at GCI Asset Management.
"The Nikkei was a little bit overheated after a recent rally. The BOJ's decision was in line with expectations but it became a trigger for the sell-off."
The Nikkei rose to a two-week closing high on Wednesday.
Since peaking in July, it has been held hostage by a volatile yen, driven by expectations of a U.S. rate cut and the dollar. Still, the index has risen more than 17% this year.
Japan's markets have been hamstrung this week by political uncertainty after the ruling Liberal Democratic Party-led coalition lost its parliamentary majority in the weekend election.
The make-up of the future government is in flux and Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and the LDP may court smaller opposition parties that favour maintaining ultra-loose monetary policy and oppose plans to raise taxes.
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